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ANTI-HONEYMOON . ISDESCRIPTIONOF TARIFF MEASURE First Open Break in Secrecy Surrounding Deliberations Shows Reductions E <2 SHINGLES ARE AFFECTED > Couzens Refuses to Be Bound by the Agreement When He Hears Lobbyists Know _ Washington, July 31.—()—The first open break in the wall of secrecy surrounding the tariff rate delibera- tions of the senate finance committee . Republicans has disclosed a series of reductions in schedules voted by the Lumber, shingles, logs and automo- biles were the commodities affected by these decisions of the committee- men, which were disclosed, without any intimation as to whether they reflected a general trend of the com- mittee’s activities, by Senator Couzens of Michigan, after he had served no- tice he would no longer be bound by @ secrecy agreement. He withdrew from the agreement, which was voted by the committee- men when they went into seclusion a + week ago to rewrite the house tariff bill, because, he explained, many of their preceding decisions had “leaked” ‘to “lobbyists” or representatives of concerns interested in the rates af- fected, resulting in frequent demands for reconsideration. The proposed imposts on shingles and other forest products, which drew vigorous support from the northwest, has been regarded as one of the more highly controversial sections of the house bill. With other house rates af- fecting building materials, they were made the subject of an attack by Sen- ator Caraway, Democrat, in a statement given out shortly be- fore Senator Couzens made his dis- They would make the measure an “anti-honeymoon law,” Caraway said, because “roughly speaking, the $5,000 house of today will be ® $5,900 house” and the thrifty young man and his girl who have been able to save $1,000 ® year will have to put off their home building for another year. pict ieeilie ea New York Stocks | Allied Chemical & Dye .. Am. Telegraph & Telephone American Tobacco Barnsdall “A” .. Bethlehem Steel . Briggs Manufacturing adian Pacific . ‘erro De Pasco . Chesapeake & Ohio . . . aul & Pacific, pid cago & Nortiv stsaee cago, Rock Island & Pacific 134' 4 | or Gereral Moto: an Seaboard Oil . uri, Kanses d& Texas ... Paramount-Famei Fen-American Petroleum Pennsylvania Railroad Fhillips Petvoleum ... Service Corporation N. Redio ........-.... deoe Republic Iron end Steel . Reynolds Tobacco “B” . &t. Louis & San Francisco. Stars Roebuck .. Sin, Con. Oil .. Southern Pacific ‘ Southern Railway ... Standard Oil of Californi Standard Oil of New Jersey tandard Oil -: New York .... Texas Corporation Tobacco Produsts ..... Twin City Rapid Transit Union Pacific American and Foreign Power. S Schulte Stores ..... Seaboard Airline .. FARGO LIVESTOCK Fargo, N. Dak., July 31.—(#)—Live- stock unchanged except cows and hogs. peg ee jedium cows H $1.00 to 7.75; plain cows $6.00 to 6.75. | go. ' Wt’s the Weeds’ at _ Fargo’s Plane Port Pisin bodheSiresant detrei | _ Fargo, N. 31.—(AP)— “It's the weeds. t is what George Gardner, United States de- rtment of commerce inspector, id of Fargo’s municipal airport after an inspection Tuesda: Weeds and hay on Hector airport are hampering and endangering planes taking off and landing, Mrs. Gardnef said. Obstructions at the; north and south ends of the id should be removed and a hangar built for overnight planes, Mr. Gard- her recommended. fo OQ. GC. Lindvig, commissioner of irports, informed of Mr. Gardner’s inspection, stated that clearing of weeds and grass depends on Martin Hector, owner of the land, who ha: been letting the grass and weed: grow for haying purposes. Hector donated the airport tract to the city for five years’ use. ROTARY CLUB GOES T0 EGYPT IN WORD AND SLIDE PICTURE Dr. E. P. Quain Talks on Trip Up Nile; Indian Girls Sing at Crowded Luncheon The Rotary club was taken to old Egypt again today when Dr. E. P. Quain continued his lantern slide lec- ture on his tour of the Old World last winter and spring. He talked on what he had seen in his trip up the Nile and illustrated it all with pictures of ruins, as at Karnak and Luxor, with modern hotel views to bear out his description that Egypt was a hodge-podge of the most ancient and the ultra-modern. A Nile steamer, the Puritan, the Sphinx, the pyramids, minarets, nar- row streets, goatskin water carriers, donkeys and camels were among the sights thrown on the screen to visualize the things the doctor de- scribed as he talked. The Lions den in which the lunch- ’|eons are held was jammed. There was a considerable number of guests. E. H. Busse, of Seattle, brother-in-law of Judge W. L. Nuessle, was one. George S. Dobbie, of Chicago, an- other. Also Lieut. E. J. Taylor, ,Jr., of the U. S. navy; R. G. Bonell, Bil- lings, Mont.; Elmer Olson, Minot; William Nuessle, Dr. F. Griebenow, Fenton Goddard, Bismarck; Mrs. Herman Scheffer, Dora LaFrance, Marie LaFrance, Alice Slater and Vitalline Azure, the girls Indian school, and John J. Capliss, who has come here from Minneapolis to be agents’ secretary with the Provident Life Insurance company. James Bramley, the new 800 Line super- intendent, was taken in as a member. The girls from thé Indian school sang the “Pale Moon” song and Alice ., | Slater sang “The Indian Love Call.” , | Mrs. Scheffer accompanied. (Pilots Pay Tribute To Fallen Comrade Who Died in Crash (Continued from page one) 2%, | the sentence today?” Weak in Knees Both said they felt fine. although O'Brine added he was a “little weak in the knees.” Asked as to the hardest part of the flight, O'Brine replied without hesi- tation “The first 100 hours.” Both airmen had praise fcr the Plane, Jackson adding “That old mo- tor sure is a lulu. It would have done another 200 hours.” O'Brine was even more optimistic. “Yeh, we could take it up again and break the rec- 4” They were steady on their fect and the long time aloft had not impaired their hearing. One of the officials started to shout at Jackson and drew the comment, “I can hear you.” ‘O'Brine gained a pound and a half 4|in the air while Jackson's weight re- mained stationary at 154 pounds. + |O'Brine’s weight was 140 on coming down. Both had pulses of 84, a gain 4jof 10 for Jackson and eight for O'Brine. Receive $31,000 ¢ The flyers earned more than $31,000 in their time aloft, including 825,000 %s|from the Curtiss-Robertson company. An additional $2.800 was received in cash besides gifts receive! by the ;|chamber of commerce and untotaled. Théir pay as pilots for the- Curtiss- Rebertson company was continued during the 18 days. The feting begins today. A cham- ber of commerce luncheon at noon ineludes the presenting of a watch to each flyer. A parade will precede the luncheon. The flyers are to appear at the municipal opera, the manage- {ment of which has promised them $1 on hour each for each hour of their flight. it was estimated the Robin Lew 25,009 miles using 2.580 gallons of | gasoline and 158 gallons of oil. Forty- seven refueling contacts were made out of a 77 aggregate. The propeller on the orange er oe made Approximately 32,000, revo- lutions, There was sonte gasoline “| left in the tanks and both tires were infisted. Jackson and O’Brine had been cautioned to watch for > grennd S| loop if one tire was empty on landing. {Fargo Tennis Star . Still Goes Strong). Minneapolis, July 31.—()—Phil | Wooledge, Fargo, N. D.. eliminated from the northwest junior tennis singles tournament, today still was a contender for another court cham- pionship. A survivor of opening rounds in the boys’ tourney, Wool- ; THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE._WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1929 AIRPLANE 10 BEAR | Noltimier Solves | Fish Death Puzzle ike when it comes to ammonia. that large numbers of dead fish had Services Will Be Held at Former cnne river. ‘ i A | Why? And how did the fish die? Home of Pilot Killed in was it the heat? Net fishermen? | Water pollution? Disease? Endurance Attempt Noltimier knowing that the poliu- tion reason was normally the cause Minnesota in which Capt P. L. Crich- ed an odor peculiar to homes during ton was killed and Owen I. Haugland the annual spring housecleaning. fatally injured while attempting to| Near the graveyard of the fish, the set a new endurance flight record, | Armour Packing plant is located. Buffalo Friday. ficial refrigeration, said Mr. Nolti- Military funeral scrvices will be |micr. Maybe some of the ammonia conducted there and a number of was escaping into the river. aviators will participate. Burial will; Noltimier was right. The Armour be in Springfield, Minn., the birth- officials have repaired a faulty drain Place of his widow. ‘pipe and the Sheyenne fish are saved ton will be conducted tomorrow in pleasures, j the Fort Snelling chapel with burial ; Port where the Minnesota crashed Monday. SOMBRE POET DIPS INTO LOCAL THEMES Andrew A. Nelson, Casket Man, | Writes of Roosevelt Cabin and Old Mandan Garden | IN PROHIBITION NET | Twenty-four Federal Officers Make Sweep After Investi- gator Lays Path ness of Andrew A. Nelson, but he off-/on Otter Tail county yesterday and sets that funereal calling with some- today and rounded up a long list of thing more zestful. in the form of |alleged liquor offenders. It was the writing poetry. Real poctry, too. Some | most extensive operation of this kind of it recalls James Whitcomb Riley, jever conducted in this county. some Thomas Moore, some Will Aiken, | ‘Two under-cover agents have been and verse. For he writes on widely separated themes and gets various |°"4 ee eee styles into his rhythmic sentences. Mr. Nelson is from St. Paul and he | | makes Bismarck on his business ig’ |;Younds. He was here today. When | he called on Joseph Tschumperlin, this morning, he left the latest edi- 10 f TER BIG DRILL ion of his poems with him. It is en- titled “Smoke and More Smoke, | Thanacrucis” and other poems. i ee ‘The main poem of the lot deals with | Decided at Dinner to Expand to the solemnities and gravity of the " passing of the pipe on the standing | Fifty Men and Compete at Rock reservation. It philosophizes on ati " the ceremonial practices of the old / National Convention Sioux. Mr. Nelson often runs down oe there to mingle with the Indians _ Bismarck will be represented in the when in this section of the country “tum and bugle corps competition of | and he likes to dabble in their myths the American Legion national con- | and legends and transmute them into Vention at Louisville, September 30. verse. The corps of Lloyd Spetz post will Then there are in the book one ter the drill caatests. This was de- | poem on a Bismarck subject and an- jclded Tusday evening when a combi- other on a Mandan topic. ‘The Bis- |nation business meeting and dinner marck poem ends: was held at the Prince hotel by the “Forever the scroll of immortals corps. In view of the winning of scc- Will carry a rancher’s name, ond place in the state competition at And long in the annals of mortals, |Minot—when only 18 men were en- His struggles will live in fame.” 7 The subject is the Rooseveli cabin {ought to be able to make a good on the capitol grounds. The Mandan | Showing in the national contest, and jPoem deals with the old garden of 35 the number of participants counts } Mandan and refers to memories of the |in the points scored, it was decided anished tribe of Indians which gave ‘ increase the strength of the corps , the city across the Missouri river its to 50 men. name. It concludes: The dinner was attended by the 25 monial of good-will toward the of- ficers of the organization. In the course of the dinner gifts were pre- And lived in love and tender: sented to Spencer S. Boise, director; There are poems in the hook on!C. F. Dirlam, assistant director, and | Abraham Lincoln, on Woodrow and | Charles F. Martin, managcr. the first Mrs. Wilson and on many | iking themes, developed by | y the World war’ me deveored bY Lou Gehrig Clouts Twenty-Sixth Homer SIMMONS COMPANY [2s xe jtig hit his twenty |Uhe season in the first inning of the White Sox-Yankee game here today, \increasing his margin over Babe Ruth jto two. Young Ed Walsh in the box and the bases were empt, This garden will his soul caress. | For civilization that is rood Is but the wild more understood San Francisco, July 31.—(AP)— eee William T, Bonner, 69 year old San) TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY Francisco inventor, has filed a $12,-| —— 500,000 suit in federal court here; FOR SALE—Furniture for bed rooms, against the Simmons company, bed| living room, dining room, and kitch- manufacturers, alleging infringe-; cn, piano, radio, Hoover vacuum ment of his patent on a fastening to; cleaner, Maytzg clectric washer, secure side rails of beds to their; clectric range, gas water heater and posts. laundry stove. 201 First street. Fresh tea! No other is like it «+ for it’s a Schilling secret. ‘Money back Try. a tin of any size. If you don’t declare tt the most. freshly fragrant iced tea you ever served ... your grocer returns your money. Your statement is enough. | SUPERINTENDENT IS same warden, was called to West | Fargo to investigate the complaint | been found on the banks of the Shey- | Minneapolis, July 31 —The | of wholesale death in the finny realm | ‘Ace High.” refueling ship of the |examined the river water. He detect- | vill convey the body of Haugland to | Packing plants use ammonia for arti- | Military funeral services for Crich- for future devotees of piscatory | | OFFENDERS CAUGHT Fergus Falls, Minn, July 31.—“m—| ——— Twenty-four federal agents, headed | Selling burial caskets is the busi- oy Maurice Silverman, ieoobed down | some other noted writers of rhyme here some time making purchases! ‘tered—it was decided that the corps “Who mourn the passing wilderness, /mémbers of the corps. It was a testi-; i — Jpkiicovs with lunch or | HELD FOR SHORTAGE of $5,000 in City School District Green Bay, Wis., J Ira H. McIntire, for six perintendent of Green Bay arrested last night on 000 in city funds. He spent the night in jail and was to be ar- ‘aigned today While MelIntire is charged with it is the opinion of F. J. Jonet, who found. of Timiriazeff Agricultural academ from Fargo. . The group of Russian farming ¢: studying agricultural schools and tour by automobile. Paul where they visited the agricul- Minnesota on Monday. York, Michigan and Wisconsin in search for information for the sovict. Taylor, Gladstone Firms Burglarized n, N. D., July 31.—Burgia sterday morning broke into the J. C. Christen general merchan- dise store at Taylor and the Japp garage at Gladstone, both of which are near her iderable loot. elsewhere to be on the look- out for the merchandise. Uit4, o aT! Oth! between meals, Fully aged to give that famous flavor. M. K. GOETZ, BREWING Co. 859... 70 ¥. ST. JOSEPH, KISSOURT “#307 new Wx cout & mes 3 Accept no substitute, look for the name Goetx Country Club on the bottle cap, D25-tbuters iNash-Finch Co, F'sryares, No. Dak. a aed We pay him. You keep the tea. price. IN GREEN BAY FUND Auditor Discovers Discrepancy nt charging embezzlement of the embezzlement of only $5,000, is auditing the books of the school board, that other shortages will be! To See Mandan Farm Russian agronomists .and icul- | e . turalists headed by Professor M. Wolf | Coupled with the livestoc ar will be a man; Moscow, will visit the U. S. Great ‘Thursday, according to word received | perts arc touring the United States | conditions. ‘They are making their Today the Russians are visiting the North Dakota experiment station at the North Dakota Agricultural college in Fargo, arriving in Fargo from St. tural college of the University of! From Mandan the Russians will go, Coln. to Bozeman and Missoula, Mont. They have visited stations "in New here. the camp. the Taylor business house was gained | b; cutting a hole in a window pane and unfastening the catches. garage was entered by vetting a door jopen. |Auto Race King Held On Mann Act Charge It's out of the frying pan into the fire for John Walters, Grand Forks automobile racing driver, arrested at the Missour! Slope fair in Mandan last week on a charge of abducting a minor Moorhead girl. “Arraigned speed king had taken a girl from Ab- crdeen, 8. Dak., to Jamestown and {252d Infantry, Organized Reserv Mandan for immoral purposes. The | YU know, Doc Snell at home who complainant is the girl's father. STOCK SHOW DAT! h r 31.—-(AP)— rack around the center pole to hang Omaha's annual livestock and horse | clothes on. They gave us each some ill be held November 1 to! bedding and a mosquito net, and ng to an announcement by | we're all fixed up to sleep, and 1 in charge. |cnough room left in the place for a show this | dance. noth celebration | ommemorating Nebras Plains field station near Mandan) Niversary as a sta Dear Sister Suc: Well, old Betsy Ann ran in good | shape, and here I am at Fort Lin- | You and Dad thought we | wouldn't make it for camp opening, | but we made it, and Jim and I were }in two days ahead of time,. with | nothing to do but look around. Fort Lincoln is four miles out Bismarck, and there is one battalion | of the 4th U. 8. Infantry stationed | Lieutenant Colonel Alfonte is in command of the whole | Shooting match, including our camp. | The camp we are in is just south of | the soldiers’ barracks. The first place €amp Headquarters which is bestde the road in front of In the same building is a room fitted up as a Hostess Hou with tables and chairs , Dickinson, is investigating the! playing checkers, etc., aud some nice Ss and has sent word warning | big soft chairs to sit and loaf in. There are hundreds of books | reading, and Sergeant Rich says they Shelves in the Christen store were | are there for us. cleaned off, the burglars taking the ladies of Bismarck provided the canned goods, dresses, and firearms, furnitu The garage lost three tires and tubes | to the and various accessories. Entrance to| You know how I am about m { saw was in Moorhead, Walters s dismissed when H. C. Stiening, |Clay county state's attorney, moved for dismissal after presentation of | Whatever that is—said one street was evidence showing that the girl was 19 years old, a fact which precludes charge of abduction. Howard Strack, States marshal of Fargo, promptly rearrested Walters deputy United to see where we ate. I found the! place, right next to headquarters, a | big building that will seat about 400 at the tables. Here's where I join the “400.” They call it a “mess hall,” but | }I don't know why, because it sure | {is clean and neat. No mess at all. | | There was a fellow in there who said | he was Lt. Willette and that he | would see to it that we got plenty to eat. Boy, Sis, I'm for that guy. Out back of the mess hail there | are rows and rows of big tents. A/| soldier told us they were “pyramidal” tents, and it's casy to sce how they get that name. They are lined up to make four streets. This same sol- ‘dier—he told us he was a “buck for each company of the C. M. T. C. He said the little tents lined up in two rows near ours were for the of- ficers who will run the camp. An- other man he called “Sarge” said most of these officers were civilians hellberg, of Boy Soldier impressed C. M. T. C. Camp, Ft. Lincoln, N. D., July 31, 1929. The scrgeant said | for this room. More power just like us, and belonged to the examined Jim and me belongs to the | | “Reserve.” Guess those fellows are | Just real guys like old Doc. Our tents each have six beds in them, and a It's 12 o'clock, and I just heard a's 75th an-| a bugle. A soldier told me this morn- jing that when 12 o'clock and a SPECIAL BUSINESS MAN’S LUNCH Only 35 Cents Per Plate. At the City Cafe Unle: 220 Main Ave. Only a few left at this These sets have been selling at $137.50 to $167.50. with Cushion in: Fee ation PISTON RING INNER RING iminate piston slap and off pumping Replacement Piston Rings. & forces outer ring into nerfect cylinder seal. Combination Outer and Inncr Ring — 35 GAMBLE STORES ee Features: Walnut Cabinet 7 Tubes Long and Short Very Selective chow. Jim wanted to see if there | bugle call came together, that was were any ball diamonds, but I wanted | “chow” call. Me for the chow. Your loving brother, Bu PALACR ——<————_____. Tonight - Thurs. - Fri. 7:15 -9 p.m. — 25c - 50¢ IN SCENE FROM 100% All Talking All Singing - All Playing NOTICE TO VIOLATORS OF TRAFFIC ORDINANCE ss owners of cars which have been tagged for traffic violations or which are tagged in the future for traffic violations, do not renort to police headquarters within 48 hours after being tagged, warrants for their arrest will be issued and fines imposed accordingly. BOARD OF CITY COMMISSIONERS. Dynamic Speaker One Dial Control Distance Reception