The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 3, 1929, Page 6

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3 D. 'B OONSTITUTIONALITY OF DORMITORY BILL | * TOBEDETERMINED, Notice of Appeal Has Been Re-' ceived From an Order of the Burleigh District Court Constitutionality of the Hamilton- Fowler bill, permitting institutional holding companies to erect dormi- tories at state cducational institu- tions, will be challenged in the su- preme court. Notice of appeal has been reccived from a recent order of the Burleigh} county district court sustaining a demurrer to a complaint filed by Maurice Kaufman in which the plaintiff attacked the dormitory building law as unconstitutional. Kaufman is represented by Mc-! Intyre, Burtness and Robbins of Grand Forks and the attorney gen- eral's office will defend the action for the state board of administration which is named as defendant. ‘The test will be made on the qucs- tion of the legality of an cffort to construct a dormitory at the state egricultural college at Fargo under the new statute. The complaint attacks the consti- tutionality of tie act on 11 different points. Chief among them are the contentions that the law is class leg- islation, that it vests in the state board of administration powers which can be exercised only by the legisia- ture and which cannot legally be Gclezated to board, and that it granis to some institutions privileges not given to all citizens of the state. | Tt asserts that an agriculiural col- lege dormitory association has been formed at Fargo to take advantage of | he law and that the association will | proceed to construct a dormitory un-/| less restrained by the court. | A law similar to the Hamilton- Fowler act was passed at the 1927 legislative session but was held un- constitutional. The present law was drawn to mect objections to the first statute. It is understood that a number of state educational institutions cs to build dormitories under th tnt law if it is held constitutional. PRODUCERS OF FLAX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, AUGUST 38, 1929 _ MARY DESCRIBES PICTURE Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks By DAN THOM Hollywood. Calif., Aug. 1 For the first ne in 16 y Pickford is to y the role of a lead- ing lady. And the hero of the picture will be none other than her husband, Douglas Fa For the several years there have been repeated rumors and an equal number of deniais that Mary and Doug would make a picture to- gether. At last the rumors have won. They started work in June on Shake: speare’s “The Taming of the Shrew,” (NEA)— 's Mary with playing Petruchio and i Mary portraying Katherine. q In a sen: 3 film will take Mary back to her Biograph days, as it q was there that she used to pl fem- e inine leads opposite m: ae he Burtness Declares Proposed Re- duction of 7 Cents Is a | Great Disappointment Grand Forks. N. D., Aug. 3.—(?)— Intensive opposition to the action of , the senate finance committee in fix- ' ing tariff on flaxseed at 56 cents, in- stead of 63 cents as provided by the amendment in the Hawley bill, will be made by various organizations in the northwest flax producting area, eccording to Congressman O. B. Burtness, who has already wired 2 Protest to Senators Smoot, Watson and Shortridgs. Burtness expressed great disap- that time she always has star of every picture in which she ap- peared. Wants Him to Be Boss “I am going to be Douglas’ leading lady in this picture because I think the man should be at the head of things,” Miss Pickford told me. “Ever since we have been with United Artists we have cach maintained sep- arate companies for our production activities. But for this picture I am going to work for Douglas’ company. “We have wanted to make a picture together for a long time, but were never able to get a story that suited us. Douglas’ swashbuckling character and my sympathetic character would- n't go very weil together, so we had to wait until we could get a story that would fit us both. In making the May Revolutionize Casting ‘This step taken by Miss Pickford is v the film industr stars when one neme to draw crowds to the box office. clared “America’s would like to wor sweetheart.” den on my own shoulders.” Contrary to the has any idea of retiring. “I have never been so interested in pictures as I am at the present time.” “I am_ positively through with child roles unless I should make a film in which I start Mary remarked. “I would love to make a few pic- tures with some of the big stars.” de- “I with Emil Jan- , nings. John Gilbert and two or three others. It would be a great relief not to have to carry most of a film’s bur- belief that when Doug and Mary made a picture to- gether that film would mark their last appearance on the silver shect, neither Former Wife of German War Lord Stirs 40 GOLFERS GATHER SHE’S MAKING WITH DOUG , Europe With Revealing | London, Aug. 1.—(NEA)—At a time when it appears possible that Ex-Kaiser Wilhelm may return to Germany, a striking book blasting the glories of the one-time war lord, Ludendorff, and written by his for- mer wife, Frau Margarethe Lud- endorff, has become the literary sensation of Europe. | With Germany mourning the stigma of war guilt fastened upon it by the Treaty of Versailles, her book, “When I Was Wife,’ kaiser’s old aide, is widely. The book reveals pale with anguish and disappoint- | ment over the kaiser’s dismissal of 'him from the vast power he had being read | with fear, flecing in disguise into Sweden to escape the wrath of the revolutionists, a Ludendorff foam- ing with wrath because his old as- sociate, President Hindenburg, re- fused to him in Municl; a Ludendorff making a fool of him- self in the Kapp and Hitler “putches,” both of which miserably flopped—these are some of the pictures of the one-time war idol. He Has Protested The book is being cagerly read ‘by all Europe. Her former hus- band has since married, has issued a letter of protest about the book, | but the reigning opinion is that deftly, and without any malice or} ‘ill-will, but merely showing him as he really was, Frau Ludendorff) has skinned him alive. She mar-j ried him in 1909 and they lived to-) gether until 1926. The book is full of plums. To Ludendorff’s | a striking etching of the ex-| a Ludendorff | over the German armies in the bat-| tle zones; a Ludendorff trembling! | begin with, she kills the legend| about Hindenburg and Ludendorff.| According to the German yarn.| when the Kaiser in a panic called| upon cld Hindenburg to come out| of his enforced retirement and take {charge of the eastern front, the old: warrior is @gnposed to have said:/ Fairbanks and 'y apt to bring about somewhat of a revolution in . If two of the big- gest and highest-salaricd stars in the business can combine on a picture and make it a financial success, other stu- dios are quite likely to follow suit and team their stars for some productions. This has not been done heretofore be- cause executives could not see the sense of paying the salaries of two vas sufficient rif drily as “Supreme War Lord,” no offi- cer would have dared make terms. As a matter of fact, she says Hin-| denburg and Ludendorff were both assigned to the job by the Kaiser’s choice. Their dazzling successes in the battle of Tannenburg and other conflicts on the eastern front soon made them national heroes. Luden- dorff and Hindenburg went on from triumph to triumph il they seem-! ed bigger than the Kaiser. He abot the figurehead, but they for a time had the real power. dorff seemed to have a presentiment; of what would happen to him some! day. Once, when he came to Ber- lin and was given a mighty ovation from frantic crowds, he said to his wife: “Ah, belicve me, the favor of crowds, like the favor of rulers, is very changeable. You will soon there will be rocks flung.’ Fired by Kaiser | In 1918 Frau Ludendorff says the situation on the western front grew as a child and grow up. But T never ‘cteadily worse, due to the fact that will go out of my way to look for such a story. And as for retiring from the screen—well. that is the farthest thing from my mind right now. Future Plans Uncertain “Neither Douglas nor I know what we will do after finishing ‘The Tam- Picture we are going to stick very closely to Shakespeare's original story and keep the entire film in a light comedy vein.” “The Taming of the Shrew” will be filmed in color and will be an all- talking production, marking the sec- ond attempt of both in the talkie field. There will be no doubt about its pointment at the action of the com- mittee, and in his telegram to Sen- ator Smoot, he said that proposed re- duction of flaxseed tariff was a great blow to the northwest. He further stated that the northwest is vitally interested in increasing flax acreage to aid in reducing the wheat surplus and that the tariff on flaxseed should ing of the Shrew.’ I am quite sure I will make a modern picture of a more | or less serious nature, but I don't | think Douglas has any particular type of story in mind. “Right now my biggest worry is that just when we are about ready to start cur picture Douglas will decide he wants to go to Europe and drag me’ over there with him. He always wants every steamer landed big forces of Ar.crican troops, who, fresh in body and spirit, marched forth in over- whelming numbers. There were stormy debates in the German “eichstag. In the closing days of the war, the Kaiser urgent- ly summoned Hindenburg and Lu- dendorff to Berlin. The Ki was angry. He vented his wrath his, two generals. His hitter criticisms/ were especially directed at what he} termed Ludendorff’s fatal mistakes. The latter replied: “With deepest pain I must rec- ognize from the reproofs of Your | Bottineau ... La Moure County Heads Others; Total of 6,566 So Far, to 10,434 in 1928 today. this season is 6,566 as compared with | STATE HAL CAINS 10,434 at the same time last year. La Moure county, with 775 hail STATE TOURNAMENT Paul Cook Is Out Wielding His Clubs Across Links in Practice Rounds | The invasion of North Dakota golfers of the Devils Lake Town and Coun- | try club began in earnest today when {about 40 golfers from various parts \of the state arrived to participate in the annual state tournament which. | starts Monday. Over 50 entries have |registered so far and about 100 are lexpected to be entered by Sunday ‘night, according to W. K. Nimmo, |secretary of the State Golf associa- jtion. Bill Fowler, defending champion, |from Fargo and his brother, Dick, jand Paul Cook, Bismarck, tourney j favorites, were out today wielding \their way across the course in prac- |tice rounds. They scored 43 and 44 on the nine-hole course. Par is 37. WORK ON SYNAGOGUE IS NOW UNDER WAY | Building to Be Finished so as to Dedicate It on Jewish New Year, October 5 Excavating has been be-un on the summer. The building is being erected by Agaton and Larson, Man- dan contractors. It is to be com- pleted in time for dedication on the Jewish New Year, which falls on October 5. The structure will be 50 by 50, two stories high, with a basement and of a S| ly 578 claims for hail'losses were | Seating capacity of 450. The first that at that time, with the Kaiser, ceoeved to the state hall insurance | 00 Will Include a banquet room and department for the week ae Suly | 27. according to figures made pul ‘The number of claims received | 8tegation. . living quarters for the rabbi, J. Mek- There also is to be a schoolroom for teaching in Hebrew and rooms | for outside children who come to claims presented between June 1 and | the city for instruction. In the rear July 26, has suffered most seriously | from hail this year. Williams county | is second with 558 claims. The number of claims rece various counties during the week end- | Al Rosen, of Bismarck, and |Sloven, Al Thal, Rabbi Mekler and ived from | N.| 24 to September 2, will draw nearly will be a playground. The building committee includes ;Charles Rigler, C. B. Rosen, Sam ing July 27, together with the number | GTuengaard, of Mandan. this year, follows: But Luden-! of claims received from cach county AIM FOR RECORD Chicago, Aug. 3.—()—With a goal of 700 hours in the air, a Stinson- | Detroiter plane, carrying three pilots, Suing June rad |will go aloft tomorrow to begin an County No. of losses Total of ; received Season 20-26 July 26 Adams .. 3 Barnes .. 1 Benson . Billings Bowman Burke ..... Burleigh Cass Cavalier ... Dickey .. Divide Dunn . Eddy .. Emmons Foster .. + 272 ,endurance flight over the municipal | 66 248 | — the weather permitting. An effort will be made to better the | world endurance record set by Dale ten | (Red) Jackson and Forest O'Brinc at St. Louis, who stayed up in the 116 | St. Louis Robin for 420 hours, 218) The principal farm crops produced 2, by United States farmers have been estimated to be worth $13,000,000,000 ‘a9 | annually. 52) 188 | 12 21 | Devils Lake, N. Dak., Aug. 3.—(?)—/| ler now filling that place in the con- | |Cleimency Denied for Coast Guard Killer ency to James Horace Alderman, un- der sentence to be executed August 17 for killing two coast guardsmen off | the coast of Florida in.1927. Alder- man was found guilty of killing Vic- |tor A. Landy and Sidney ©, Sander- |lin, near Fort Lauderdale while the | coast guardsmen were attempting to | transfer liquor found on Alderman’s boat to a coast guard cutter. BE HOPEFUL FOR DEVELOPMENT OF GRAIN STABILIZER Grand Forks Man Is One of 16 Selected by Federal Farm Board for Meeting Story of Life 1N DBVILS LAKE FOR |ssrssrsa cassia | Fargo, N. D., Aug. 3—(P)—P. A. {Lee of Grand Forks, secretary of the | North Dakota Farmers-Grain Dealers association, is hopeful for the develop- | ment of a grain stabilization corpora- | tion of real value as a factor in mar- ‘keting grain, he told members of the association meeting here today. Lee is one of a committee of 16 selected by the federal farm board to meet in Chicago August 26 as a nucleus to build the corporation. R. F. Gun- kelman, former president of the grain dealers, is presiding as chairman of the meeting. LAMONT SUCCESSOR NOT YET SELECTED | Members of the state board of ad- | ministration Friday failed to select @ successor to Dr. J. G. Lamont as head of the state tuberculosis sanitar- ium at. Dunseith. Dr. Fannie Dunn Quain, Bismarck, | @ director of the state anti-tubercu- losis society, conferred with her board, but it was indicated that she did not recommend anyone for the place. | Air Races Will Draw Nearly 50 Army Planes |,, Washington, Aug. 3.—(?}—The na- | tional air races at Cleveland, August | fifty army planes for participation in tactical exhibitions. ‘The army's entries include 18 pur- suit planes from the first pursuit | group, Selfridge field, Michigan; 18 | attack planes from the third attack group, Fort Crockett, Texas, and nine bombardment planes from Langley field, Va. The bombardment planes, meanwhile, are under orders to make bs rapid formation flight to the Pacific ‘oast. TAX CUTS HORSEPOWER Because cars in Great Britain are taxed heavily according to horse- Power, over 65 per cent of all cars registered there are less than 14 horsepower. BARGE LINES OPEN NEW OPPORTUNITIES FOR LOWER FREIGHT Reduction of 20 per Cent Wilt Be Available in Traffic Opening Aug. 27 : Minneapolis, Aug. 3.—()—By vir of new joint tariffs announced took, and effective August 27, Minneapolis Persons and firms having occasion to purchase goods in Indiana, Illinois. Kentucky, Michigan, New York, Ohio. Pennsylvania or West Virginia, will be able to have them shipped here at @ saving of 20 per cent in freight rates via the upper Mississippi barge lines. Announcement to that effect wa: made by W. W. Morse, superintendent of the upper river division of the In- land Waterways corporation. Morse also stated that six of the flect of new barges under construction at Pitts- burgh have been completed and are | being brought down the Ohio river. They are expected to reach Minne- apolis within the next two weeks. The be cost bated each. ires compiled by the corporatior, for the month of July, 1929, as com- Pared with those of July, 1928, dis- Closed the tonnage carried and the revenue, but have practically doubled. Total tonnage carried last month amounted to 15,827 tons, as compared with 7,700 tons in July of last year. 456 in July 1 7 to $131,166 last month. arate ‘RAIN DAMPENS FIRE IN CANADA FORESTS Winnipeg, Man., Aug. 3.—(7)—For- est fires in northwestern Ontario and eastern Manitoba were believed to be definitely checked this morning after @ night of steady rain which spread over the entire flame stricken area. While reports from Kenora district were meager, weather officials de- clared the rainfall lasting 10 hours and continuing today was experienced from the head of the lakes to many miles east, covering the whole forest fire district. Port Arthur and Fort Williams re- ported showers that lasted four and one-half hours. The fire menace was almost completely obliterated in that vicinity. Thundershowers in southern Al- berta last night were of great benefit to crops but did not extend far enough northward to be of any use in drowning the worst forest fires Al- berta has suffered in years. LETTER WRITER TO JAIL Chicago, Aug. 3.—(*)— George A Owens, 27, of Neenah, Wis., accusec of sending threatening letters to Bohumir Kyril, wealthy bandmaster and former president of the First Na- tional Bank of Berwyn, a suburb, was fined $300 and costs and sentenced to @ year in the heuse of, correction to- day. The charge was defrauding an innkeeper. 60 4 138 Golden Valley .. Grand Forks Grant .. Griggs .. Hettinger . Kidder La Mot Logan McHenry . Cr AOA TS CHRYSLER morors ProbvUCcT Pisin i ; FINE FEATURE:- You will find on Plymouth the be increased rather than lowered. In 8 telegram to J. S. Milloy, secre- tary of the Greater North Dakota as- sociation, Burtness urged that the association take a lead in organizing telegraphic protests from flax pro-| ducing areas to Senator Smoot and/ individual members of the finance committee. PROTEST LODGED WITH | Proposal of the senate finance com- mittee to establish an “inadequa' tariff on flax already have been taken , by the Greater North Dakota associ- audible success from Mary's angle. Her voice was proven good in “Co- quette.” With Doug it’s a different story. His speaking prologue in “The Tron Mask” was anything but a suc- cess. However, I understand that the United Artists’ technicians have now learned how to record his voice, and recent tests have proven it to be very to go some place, but I guess he is no different than other men in that re- spect. All men seem to have wander- lust strains in them. Personally, I pre- fer to spend more time at home. When I get on a dirty train or start to get seasick on a ship I think how nice it would be to be right here at home.” supply saved the bank from losing several thousand dollars in cash. They left one actelyene gas tank and three empty milk cans in the bank. Belief that the robbers came from the Carrington district early Friday afterncon to look the bank over, was FOR OPERATION ON LINER IS STOPPED ation and the Northwest Agricultural foundation, according to James S. , secretary of the former o1 ganization. i A strong protest already has been lodged with Republican leaders at , and the two organisa tions will instigate additional pro‘rsts from every srailalle source in Minne- expressed by Mr. Schlenker. Cripple Thought ‘Spotter’ | Several strangers were noticed loaf- | ing around the streets about 6 p. m. and a “cripple" was scen several | times peering in the bank windows. The milk cans which were used to | hold the water to keep the safe’s; contents from catching fire—but | which failed their purpose—were | stolen from the Northern Pacific | | depot platform in Melville, 10 miles | south of Carrington. | Wahl was left gagged and bound in | it it made the bank from shortly after mid- sald. “If night to 4:45 a. m. when he broke of his bonds about 10 minutes after the estab- robbers had left. "| “They were considerate robbers, I | Must say,” said Mr. Wahl. “They Der cent! asked me if the bonds were too tight | . The more acres! and moved me near a window so that | there I wouldn't be suffocated by the | acetylene gas fumes.” Entrance to the bank was gained RS, FRED BRITTEN seer wm = ‘wife tried to console Leviathan Is Halted When an Acute Attack of Appendi- citis Strikes American Southampton, Aug. 3.—(#)—The great liner Leviathan, of the United States lines, was stopped on her cast- bound trip dead for nearly an hour in mid-ocean while Mrs. Fred A. Britten, Chicago, wife of the chairman of the house of representatives naval affairs committee, underwent an emergency operation for appendicitis: It was learned today when the Leviathan docked that Mrs. Britten had falicn ill suddenly while the liner | was in mid-Atlantic. Physicians de- cided an immediate operation was by “jimmying” off the catch on a rear | window. |The robbers had just entered the | | bank when he came along, Mr. Wahl | believes. CHICAGO BUTTER st . Buy ts Grades were sufficient, "but 4 4c; 99 score, Ss See po Big 4ic; 89) oe; 4c; 87 score ae. Centralized 90 score 42'sc; 2 | Sle; 88 score 39%c. agreed to bring the occan mammoth to a halt during the operation, which was performed in 52 minutes by Doc- tors Frank Stewart and A. McNamar: Mrs. Britten was declared to be “not too well” after the ship had docked today. ~~ RANGE OF CARLOT SALES Minneapolis, Aug. 3.- c sales. ter 1.34, Majesty that I no longer possess ycur confidence and that my labor on the front does not find favor in your eyes. I must respectfully ask for my dismissal.” The Kaiser hesitated a moment, then finally renlied: { “I will thank you if you ge. You ease the situation for me thus mensely. I will seek with the aid of the Social Democrats to build, up a new Reich.” | Predicted Revolution | Ludendorff hurried home. He, was deathly pale and he fell into, ia seat ina lump. Almost tonelessly | from his lips came the words to his He was thunderstruck. He had imagined he was indispensable. His im. It was useless. Then he sprang up, mutter- ‘we will no longer have an empire nor a Kaiser.” Revolution broke out all over Ger- many, Ludendorff’s name was uni-| \versally reviled. His friends urged ‘him to flee. His wife says she did |not advise this, because she did not \think such conduct worthy of him, | Adorned with a false beard and bluc | |goggles, the once famous general jslunk out of his country and ran away to Sweden. | Bitter Against Democracy | From Copenhagen he wi the “wife of his heart: |_ “It’s all like » bad dream to me.| | imperative and Captain Cunningham |! do not know whether I did right ito go away.” | Once he said to her: | “The biggest piece of foolishness ,;the revolutionaries did was to let all of us live. Well, if ever I come jinto power again there will be no |pardon. With quiet conscience I |would see Ebert (Germany's first | President), Scheidemann and com- up and Baaging:” gives linden! . Ne man is shown to be very small po- toes and very few in a tow. It ting book. 5 McIntosh . McKenzic ... McLean ..... - a 7 106 194 T15 147 21 93 196 241 3 55 101 ui 24 3 112 112 4) lymouth has Over-Size y Ea ks largest tires of any car in the low- priced field. Real over-size bal- loons—4.75—more than ample lives for this full-size car. That is why the improved Plymouth, with so much else to talk about, devotesanentireadver- tisement to over-size tires. Many motorists lose sight of the fact that tires can make a big dif- ference in riding ease—and forget howmuchtiresize meanstosa/éty. Larger tires mean riding on more air, which in turn means uu will see; in fourteen days | Wells . asSess. €| g8ecu28. Total | CLEARING HOUSE STATEMENT | New York, Aug. 3.—()—The week: ly statement of the New York clear- ing house shows: Total surplus and undivided profits $1,107,191,000, | deposi | 000 increase time deposit | $1,044,000 increase lending today $9,727,4 72,181 clearings ending July 27 $8,751,040,597, clearings this day $1,649,229,334. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR RENT—Two large comfortable rooms with plano. Call at 522 Sec- ond street. Portable typewriter, victrola, Freed-Eisemann radio with battery. Phone 1337 or call at 311 Thayer greater buoyance and comfort. Then, too, larger tires wear longer, add much to appearance and, most important of all, give the car greater traction which means sure-footed safety. From tires to roof, from radiae tor to tank, Chrysler engineers have endowed the improved Plymouth with qualities and abil. ities never before available in a car of low price. i655 3 end apwords f. 0. b. factory - , $655; Roadster (with rumble 2-Deor Sedan, Caleh foci Coupe, fos fe Uehs elas C rambitteat), $805, ¢ Deer Soden, $595. Aligricesf.e.b. 5 dealers Meaichkes Nero Auer Motors, lac. Bismarck, No. Dak. AMERICA’S LOWEST-P FULL-SIZE CAR Corwin-Churchill

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