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: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, JULY 20,1929 __ f | BOY PLEADS GUILT ~ > TOROBBERY CHARGE Less Than 24 Hours After He Holds Up Bank Lee East- man Is in Jail Pine City, Minn, July 20.—()—| Less than 24 hours after he held up the Security State Bank of Sand- stone, Lee Eastman, 17, Milaca high; school student, pleaded guilty to a charge of bank robbery in justice court today and was bound over to! the next term of district court in October for sentence. The complaint charged the youth with robbery under that section of | the law which makes it mandatory that he be given a life imprisonment if found guilty. Eastman, who said he robbed the bank “so I could pay my father’s saw bill,” will be taken to the Washington county jail at Stillwater late today With a revolver he had borrowed | from a friend and “patched up” him: self, Eastman entered the bank short- j ly before noon Thursday and held up: Frank Hurley, cashier. While placing | the currency in a bag, two young girl: | and a man entered. He ordered thein, | as well as Hurley, to lie on the floor. After scooping up the money, he forced them into a vault and escaped in an automobile. captured by a deputy sheriff. The bag, containing $2,192, was recovered. PATROL INSPECTOR | KILLED IN AMBUSH | Ei Paso, Texas, July 20—(Pi—Ivan | E. Scotten, a border patrol in- | shector, was shot and killed early to- day when a party of six patrolmen was ambushed by a large group, be- lived to be Mexican rum runners, cn San Elizario island in the Rio Grande. Caponizing Program On McLean Farms Is Announced by Agent Caponizing demonstrations will be conducted next week by Mr. Tully. of the Agricultural college, and County | Agent A. L. Norling at the following | McLean county farms: Thursday, July 25, at 9 a. m., at J.! B. Sellon'’s, 10 miles northwest of Turtle Lake; at 1 p. m. at Leonard Borgen’s, section 14 in Greatstone township; at 4 p. m. at L. J. Brown's, section 22, in Aurena township. Friday, July 26, at 9 a. m. at J. R. Crouse’s, 17 miles southwest of Gar- rison, near river; at 1 p. m. at Geo. R. Kinney’s, 3'2 miles south of Raub; and at 4 p. m. at John Wahl’s, 8 miles northeast of Raub. Saturday, July 27, at 1p. m., 8 miles southeast of Garrison. Machado to Organize Sugar Export Agency Havana, July 20.—/?)—Cuban sugar interests today generally approved President Gerardo Machado’s decision last night to organize immediately a cooperative export agency to control the sale of Cuban sugar. . The general feeling among growel and grinders is that establishment of an expert control agency will tend to deter the United States from enforc- ing proposed high tariff increases on Cuban sugar. Stock Shares Valued | At $77,264,128,909 Po onyht Seige July 20.—/)—The New ‘orl exchange reported that the total value of all listed aes inereased during June by $6,342,702,- ‘722, reaching $77,264,128,909 as of July 1. The total number of shares listed inereased from 932,325,207 on June 1 to 945,341,007 on July 1. The ratio of member borrowings against security collateral decreased 9.24 per cent to ae oe duly 1, from 9.39 per cent cn ———— NOTICE TO BUILDING CONTRACTORS Sealed proposals for the construe- tion of the basement for cl will be received by the Building come id City ; the inneapolis; and s Exchange, Farge. it is reserved to reject any secre FORD, JOHNEON. . Bui 4 nse ry ing Committee, " i i i NOTICE TO BIDDERS Notice is hereby iven that th Board ‘of County Commissioners of Burleigh County, North Dakota, will receive bids oor one (1) Adams No. 12 ?, to en just 6th, 2: o'clock Pa. 1938. pete ‘A certified check for 5 per cent of the amount, payable to George F. Wi chase must accompany 3 rd reserves thi - Kage a renee’ e right to re Soy y f th ; amigstoners, eo vadlel County rset ounty Auditor. Field of Guayule, a rubber-produc (above), and, the first automobile tir clally grown rubber in the United S tates. Transplanting machine (be- | low) in operation in Salinas, Calif., r ubber-growing district. Half an hour later the youth was! Rubber jee in United States Grows ing shrub introduced from Mexico e (inset) éver made from commer- e ° ° . As Tires Are Made Out of Guayule cessful manufacture of automobile tires from Guayule, a rubber-produc- ing plant. has led to an increased acreage of the Mexican shrub in 18 counties of California and Arizona. More than 4.000 acres are planted to Guayule in Monterey county, Califor- nia, alone. The development of this new in- dustry has progressed to the point where 1,600 pounds of rubber is ob- tained from a single acre at one har- vesting. Since it requires four years for the plants to mature, this is an average of 400 pounds of rubber per acre yearly. Use of the Guayule plant, pro- nounced “Y-U-Lee,” for extracting rubber is not new. It has been prac- ticed in Mexico for -more than 20 years, and from one to two per cent of all rubber used in automobile tires has been Guayule. However, the California and Arizona undertakings are the first successful cfforts to grow the plant commercially. The Mexican Salinas, Calif., July eee —_____. RABBIT TO MANAGE | BOSTON BALL TEAN Boston, July 20.—()\—President Emil Fuchs of the Braves announced today that he had appointed Walter “Rabbit” Maranville, veteran short- stop. as manager of the team. Fuchs me been managing the team person- ly. Negro Brought Here On Bad Check Count A negro claiming to be John Brooks is in jail here today awaiting a pre- | iminary hearing Monday morning on a charge either of forgery or obtai ing money under false pretenses, a cérding to the Burleigh county sher- iff’s office. The negro is charged with having passed worthless checks in Bismarck @ short time ago. He was arrested in Minot by J. A. ‘Wagner, chief of police, and brought back to Bismarck yesterday by Rollin Welch, Burleigh county sheriff, and oe J. Martineson, Bismarck police chief. FIRESTONE IS BETTER Akron, July 20.—()\—Condition of Harvey S. Firestone, president of the Firestone Tire and Rubber com- pany, was reported much improved to- day. He spent a restful night and members of his family said physicians reported that danger of pneumonia; has passed. SEES ALCOHOLISM DECLINING Atlanta, Ga—P)—A marketd de- | rubber product is obtained from na- tive plants that grow wild. First experiments with Guayule in the United States were conducted by the American Rubber Producers, In- corporated, a subsidiary of the Amer- ican Rubber Company. In 1926 200 acres were planted, and each suc- ceeding year an additional area was cut in until this year the company’s Plantings total 2.200 acres. J. M. Williams, manager of the operations at Salinas, says Guayule rubber can be produced at a profit on land suited to its culture. It should be of light texture, free from | hardpan, in a climate of not less than 10 inches rainfall.in winter and level enough to permit the use of four-row Planting machines and cultivators. Guayule rubber is not. obtained, as is Para rubber, by tapping the tree or plant. The entire shrub is plowed out and ground up. . The fibre water- logs and goes to the bottom while the pee floats to the top and is drawn off. York state following cnactment of federal prohibition laws was reported here by Dr. William C. Garvin, med- ical supervisor of the Binghamton, N. Y., state hospital. He spoke before the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric association, comparing the figure of 594 chronic cases in 1917 to 509 in 1928. Cucumbers Produced By German Station Berlin, July 20.—()—Cucumbers as by-products of an electric power plant are causing a sensation here. The municipal power station of Klingenberg, which supplies a large part of Greater Berlin's electric cur- rent, has successfully conducted an experiment in utilizing the waste steam generated in the power plant by the turbine engines and with it is heating 12 cucumber hothouses. The results have surpassed expec- tations. A yield of 100,000 cucumbers was gained from 2,500 plants at a time when vegetation was still so far behind that all other cucumbers con- sumed in Germany had to be im- ported from warmer climates. The home product commanded fully good prices as the foreign importa- tion. Other cities are watching the ex- periment with interest, and it is not unlikely that vegetable raising here- after will go hand in hand with elec- tric power generating. The Klingen- berg station already has gone in for tomatoes, in addition to cucumbers. Dance at Moran’s Barn, July 24th and 27th. Z Dance at the Dome tonight. cline in chronic alcoholism in New | Bill Klitz and his Melody Boys. THREE ARE BURNED persons were here, near Perrysburg this morning. The plane crashed and caught fire in a field, five miles south of Perrys- burg. Identity of the plane or its occupants has not been determined. The crash was seen by Vincent Haf- ner, who was riding along a road near where the machine fell. |2 MEN FEEL TEETH OF NEW AUTO RULE IN MARION COURTS La Moure, N. Dak., July 20.—(>}— Two men in this district have felt the teeth of North Dakota's new reckless driving-bonding law. They are Roy Knutson, Marion, and Oscar Storheim, Aberdeen, S. Dak. The two men were arrested in Mar- jon by Roy Sibley, town marshal, and | While intoxicated.. Each was sen- tenced to one year and fined $50 and costs and ordered not to drive auto- mobiles for one year by Judge R. H. Sherman. Sentence was suspended upon payment of the fines. Each must post $2,000 bonds with W. S. Graham, state registrar of motor vehicles, if they desire to drive in the | next 12-month period. Australians Envious Of Byrd’s Findings Sydney, Australia—(#)— Reports that Commander Richard E. Byrd has found minerals in the Antarctic have brought regrets to many Australians that their government did not explore igently. Before he left New Zealand for the Bay of Whales, Commander Byrd was quoted as saying that he did not in- tend to claim any of the land he might discover for the United States. ‘The inference drawn here, now that Commander Byrd has claimed Ant- arctic areas for his government, is that he thinks they are of real value. No man in Australia is better quali- fied to express an opinion on this subject than Sir Edgeworth David, who besides being a world famous geologist, has had personal experience of the Antarctic regions. From ob- servations he made when he was in that area, he conclu that a huge Antarctic coalfield yielded coal of similar quality to the best Australian product, exists and extends for at least a thousand miles under the Antarctic snows. Copper pyrites and molybdenite have also been found, and Professor David deduces the pre- sence of gold. Winged Justice Is Reality in Alaska Fairbanks, Alaska, July 20.—(>)— “Winged justice” has ceased to be a mere figure of speech in Alaska. It is an actuality. Alaska’s “floating court,” which vis- its the islands and other remote places along the wild, rocky coast. long has been famous, and now the “flying court” has been firmly established in the interior. The “flying court” is that of the fourth judicial district, which includes central and northern Alaska, and has its seat at Fairbanks. Before the ad- vent of commercial flying, steam- boat, gas-boat and row-boat furnished means of transportation in summer, and dog teams in winter, but now le- gal proceedings are speeded by air. The first official trip was made by air in 1926 when the court and at- tendants flew to Wiseman, 150 miles within the Arctic circle. It was the MARMON-BUILT STOCK CAR PROVES STAMINA IN Gas, Oil and Water Taken on | vision Throughout Run. _New proof — offical ‘proof — of liane peett = neal treet the outstanding SependaeitG of Marmon’s low-pric straight- tht—the Roosevel | is car has just established a new world’s non-stop record which far TO DEATH IN PLANE Toledo, Ohio, July 20.—(#)—Three reported burned to death when an airplane fell south of pleaded guilty to driving automobiles | the wind-swept, icy wastes more dil- | Fly—Official A.A.A. Super- first term of United States district court ever held there because of the remoteness of the place. The trip was made in 2 hours and 45 minutes. By boat it would have required two weeks. Recently a deputy marshal flew from Fairbanks to Ruby and returned an insane woman. The trip required six hours flying time, where the same journey by dog team would have re- quired 22 days. . Against Tuberculosis Atlantic City.—(#)—An entirely new method of discovering tuberculosis in- fection quickly, was announced for the first. time to the National Tuber- culosis association at its annual meet- ing here. By this method it is expected to di- agnose the presence of the disease within three or four days after ex- month, ;. The diagnosis, so far as disclosed, ; has not been applied in medical prac- | tice, but is under development in the | laboratories of Rockefeller institute. |. With a phosphatid made from bodies of tuberculosis germs, a blood jtest has been devised which shows |the presence of tuberculosis infection \if it exists. The phosphatid was isolated in the Sterling chemistry laboratories of | Yale university by Dr. Treat B. John- ;son and Prof R. J. Anderson. test with it was developed at Rocke- | feller institute by Dr. Florence R. Sa- jbin, Dr. ©, A. Doan and Dr. C. E. Forkner. | Agents Charged With Giving Girls Liquor | Miller, 8. D., July 20.—()—Joe Wil- |shire and C. L. Marlette, liquor en- forcement agents, were charged in dis- trict court with giving liquor to minor girls and were held to the higher | court under $1,000 bonds-each. i weabiicaaticteil | CLEAR SAILING For hot days, put away everything you possibly can do without. | tables, piano, bookcases, dressers and closets cleared, the whole house seems | cooler. | | Water doesn’t | because of the heavy feathers and an | oil gland secreted at the base of each quill. The oil sheds the water. on a duck's back | | | tube that eliminates 95 puncture. Seeing is believing phone 427, posure, instead of waiting possibly a | ° the germs are killed. Indians Want Folk Fort Yates, N. duly 20.—(?)— Natural born orators dislike to speak without an audience, particularly if they happen to be Indians. This was made plain yesterday to a senate committee investigating con- jditions on the reservation here. Rev. Herbert Welch, whose name doesn’t indicate that he is a full- {blood Indian garbed in a Roman col- lar, other accouterments of “the cloth” and beaded moccasins, wanted jan interpreter when he testified. “Why, you speak English better than the interpreter,” objected Sen- stor Wheeler of Montana. \ “Yes,” said Welch, “but if I talk | ROOSEVELT EIGHT SETS NEW WORLD'S NON-STOP RECORD (Run made under official ebservation. Record subject to Snal confirmaticn.) 440 HOURS WITHOUT SINGLE STOP | the truly medern, scientific bids will be r ceived: oh Agmintstestion in ten o'el ¢01 try endorse it. and pick-up. Compression stepped. The Simplex Method of motor reconditioning is overhauling a motor to correct and prevent oil pump- ing, compression less and piston slap. Over 50,000 garage men use it—the leading A Simplex reconditioned moter has\greater snap the combustion chamber. Moter fumes are held down. Your motor is no longer noisy. That piston slap is At Indianapolis the race was' won with SIMPLEX: PISTON RINGS, They stopped the three bad habits. Oil. pumping, Compression loss, Piston slap. - and economical method of engineers of the coun- is inereased and held in “16 Second Street STEEN iif ii | t & t MARMON |? Liquid Smoke Is | Declared Better Cologne, Germany, July 20.—(%)— Liquid smoke is used to cure meat jby Professor Teitge of Cologne uni- versity. The process is described as quicker and cheaper, and besides all To Hear Them Talk seventh grade; Eunice Elliott, sixth grade; Gladys Fele, fifth grade; Valla Bartheld, fourth grade; Lila Pinley, third grade; Gladys Swenson, second 3 and Anne Chesrown, first i Rains Benefit Crops In Stutsman County Jamestown, N. D., July 20.—(7)— t © ‘walker and Keyes, faculty members| been invented at Brooks field to de- are: Gerald Rust, principal; Mabel| crease fatalities among cabin plane Anderson, eighth grade; Helen Witte, | Passengers. then would force the flooring a safe Release Is Invented that For Trapped Flyers San Antonio, Tex—(7)—A detach- | itating escape by para- ! passengers’ chutes whenever a plane becomes un- ble trap floor, Mae ee of certain emergencies in mid-ais; has manageable. “You are not talking to them but ‘The | ‘0_us,” was Wheeler's rejoinder. Several other leaders among the tribesmen admitted they speak Eng- lish but wanted interpreters so their F fellows could hear what they had to say. 4 425 Linton Children Prepared for School i Linton, N. D., July 20.—Four hun- % dred and twenty-five children will "3 begin classes in the Linton public y schools here Sept. 2, it is announced by L. D. Berg, superintendent. Miss Evelyn Walker, Grand 4 @ graduate of the University of North Dakota, and Miss Laura Keyes, Lin- With |ton, a graduate of the Stout school, Menominee, Wis. are new teachers for the term. Miss Walker will teach Since Ben Franklin { English and history, while Miss ’? eyes will have charge of the home u economics department. Bak Miss, Keyes is « daughter of Coun- t ty Commissioner Walter Keyes. Besides and Misses have blessed the ? that showed them the % way to financial solidity. Interest 4% Y ‘§ ry ° A The First National Bank f emonstration sceuie THE PIONEER BANK | Anywhere, at anytime, day or night, at your home or office, we will be pleased to give you a ay novel demonstration of actual performance to be had with “Goodrich Air Containers,” the self-sealing 3 e y L fo of all tire troubles from ih and as the cost is nothing, e aC S \ it is to the interest of every car owner who believes ; in “SAFETY FIRST” and who earnestly desires to 9 avoid the labor of changing tires in hot weather, to that D rove it America 8 finest medium-priced automobile Ask for JOE McCLUSKY Below are examples of facts drawn from a com- e ° parison of the Oakland All-American Six with 20 leading alse toe A Aiiont aoe en Saree ier « ieBy pnienaanins land’s unrivaled value. And these are facts which aS is What these features How Ocklend com- mesn to you pares with the field Large piston displace- Only low. ment is needed to Dried ae Gable e- moderstecngine spect, | PISTON | Sooiscment of 228 ‘Moderate engine speed | DISPLACEMENT { cubic inches. Twelve nie Saree sie cart in the ficld have in the life of a car. ian depiocemens. nt Ne jee five of the 12 are higher. bile coach building means so much as Only Oakland and two Fisher. Fisher bodies other care in the field : are famous for style, Offer bodies by Fisher. ' luxury and roominess. And one of the two in in einen, ay ae FISHER BODY nearly $100 higher in sturdy composite hard- Bi the tt which wood and steel con- have leor-known bod- struction, VV wind- ies, 11 are priced above ae, ee co vent: the All-American Six, pieseovee priced ae Gaidand ‘aa Resenshiy lone sheet: ‘a wheelbase as long as gives greater rid- Prag eye lofld Fo ease and rae | inches. cat fe use of loge, emarter, WHEELBASE | © the left of 42 fect as. came time, <a land's 36 feet. a ‘ bps Sar po ovigson holy * Ouly Oaldand and one A é For other car, costing $200 more, use the Sine type ' pelntgg papel 1 posite. And no car the field equals Oak- prggicledy year BRAKES Oakland's separate i