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|| AMBRIGAN STOCKS < ARERAGEINEUROPE, é soaks 4 Bismarck Banker Tells Rotari- ; 4. ans of Summer Travel; En- 3 sign Narrates Cruise & Travel talks occupied the noon 4 luncheon of the Rotary club, today, | . When Francis Nuessle, midshipman | “in the U. S. navy, described his «. Mediterranean cruise of this sum- 2 mer and J. Leonard Bell narrated the incidents of his European trip * into England, Holland, Switzerland, Italy and France. The club took up the matter of at- tendance and arranged for the day’s 32 absentees to attend the luncheon . at Mandan Thursday, N. 0, Church- ‘ ill will furnish cars, and the custody of the absentees was assigned 13 other members, who are to see that the culprits rectify their record. Midshipman Nuessle told of An- napolis naval academy system before entering on a recital of his cruise, which was a part of the routine, two classes being sent on cruises each immer vacation, On his cruise Ensign Nuessle_ visited Barcelona, Naples, Rome, Gibraltar and Wey- mouth before the ships, the Utah, Florida and Arkansas, returned to a “Norfolk for battle maneuvers then i to end the cruise at the academy. He spoke humorously of the I « propensity to charge out of reason unless the tourist has the gift of talking down their demands for services or souvenirs. Building Boom in Engiand Mr. Bell spoke of the building boom in England, where the neglect | ars has returned to feverish on of new structures, till the ondon threatens to disappear in the rash of making over the city. . He described the quaintness of southern Holland and said he had been amazed by the keenness of the Dutch to invest in American stocks, He tried to learn something of bank- ing practices in Holland, but the! manager of a bank with whom he talked turned the conversation on to! < such topics as Anaconda Copper, Utilities, Bethlehem Stecl and the like. He said the Duteh investing heavily in American securities was in part responsible for boosting fe prices in Wall street. Mr. Bell also spoke of conditions fn Italy, where there is an immense development of clectrical power un- der way. All the water power is being turned into clectricity by the installation of power plants, As to politics, it is nct good to discuss them in Italy, he said. While at Interlaken, Mr. Bell's room reservation was changed, ow- . ing to the unexpected arrival of King Albert of Belgium. He re- ferred to Switzerland in the words of Booth Tarkington, “a land of boarding houses infested by moun- tains,” and described his view of the Matterhorn, Sailed With Boy Scouts , Instead of going to Rome, Mr. Bell said he had to cut his trip short, | so he returned west of | the Riviera and i relieved of its after-war dingi | He sailed from Cherbourg on the Lapland, the former favorite boat of the late J. Pierpont Morgan. On his start from Montreal, Mr. Bell said he found himself in the m thick of a party of boy scouts. His sa luggage not having arrived he had to leave the Cunarder Aurania at t Quebec and be transferred to the Antonio, on which the scouts were traveling. Thus he mixed with the boys and saw the review given them by the governor general of Canada, Lord Wellington. et Guests of the luncheon included ;’ H. 8. Russell, Otto Bauer and R. A. Countryman, Mandan; Albert Slor- by, Minot, and Ensign Nuessle. Change in McClusky Parking and Curfew Law Is Recommended U . (Tribune 8; jul 3 _ Club members favor parking auto- i mobiles on the curb rather than in ‘the middle of the street and believe the curfew hour should changed from 9:30 to 9 o'clock. A committee has been « the city council, Club members also are considering “* placing stop signs at side streets ad- Joining highway No. 7. 1. Funeral Services Are Held for ( G. Palmer & hagode t feeble to fe in the Bs ge t Beauty Winner | -® She's the queen of Chicago's Mexican colony. Yolanda Diaz, whose home in Mexico is at Durango, the native city of Ramon Novarro and Dolores Del Rio, cinema stars, was named the Prettiest and most popular Mexican girl in a recent contest. She is 19 ' | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, KILLING FROST AND O0-DEGREE MERCURY MARK HIT BISMARCK Cold Wave General Over North- west, With Only a Few Marks Above Freezing Reported For a city that experienced tem- Perature 43 degrees below zero last winter, Bismarck was chilled to a sur- prising degree this morning when the mercury dropped to 30 degrees above, which is two degrees below freezing ‘and a new low for the season. Heads of Bismarck houses arose earlier than usual this morning to pile coal in furnaces that members of their families might crawl from under heavy bed clothing in warm rooms. { Topcoats and gloves were the fashion on the streets during the forenoon. A killing frost here accompanied the chilling wave. Bismarck and North Dakota will remain cloudy the rest of the day but temperatures will rise tomorrow, weather officials pre- dict. ‘New low temperatures for the sea- son were established last night at many points in the state, according to the Bismarck weather bureau. At Lisbon the mercury went to 12 de- grees above vero. Jamestown report- ed 15 and Wishek 16. The only point | to enjoy temperature above freczing was Williston, where the minimum was 36. and has lived in Chicago two years. ° Second Attempt at | Counterfeiting $5 | Bills Being Made PIR. Miter ——o Washington, Sept. 18.—(%)—A sec- ond attempt is being made to coun- terfeit the new small sized currency, according to Chief Moran of the sec- ret service, who today issued warning that a bogus five-dollar bill on the Federal Reserve bank of Chicago is in circulation. The bill, which ts about an ehth of an inch shorter than the genuine bill, was pronounced by Chief Meran as a crude piece of work. MNRESOTA'S RRL CREDIT PLAN SOORED ° | | Fate of System Will Be Deter-] mined With a Series of Investigations St. Paul, Sept. 18—(4—An investi- gation which is expected to determine whether the Minnesota rural credit bureau will be continued or liqui- dated and its operations ended will be started Saturday by the in- terim commission on taxation, local indebtedness and finance. Results of the investigation, mem- bers of the commission said. will be incorporated in a report to the next legisidtive session which probably will recommend what should be done. The inquiry will be made through a series of hearings, some of whicr will be held next week at northera Minnesota towns. Problems of local indebetdness, taxation, and tax delinquency in ad- dition to the rural credit situation also will come before the commission which will hold its first meeting at ‘Wadena Saturday. Representative J. E. Therrien, Pine City, and Otto C. Neuman, Wheaton, have charged the rural credit bureau has outlived its usefulness, that it has been forced to take huge losses on |® ‘account of depreciation of farm lands on which it has $52,000,000 and that its policy of placing delinquent lands on the mar- ket at “any price” is holding down the general land market in the state. or INGOME TAX RETURN DATA MADE Democrats Ask Information Re- garding Taxes of 323 Cor- porations, Individuals i | [ : ¢ i i | igi ! ty Hl | i ‘ iL gs fe | . [ Hd i : ! 2 i [ ii #3 i F s E ge : I 25 fie ze H E z il il iH Hi aff I d i + : tl i f : ti i f l | | i | i ij g il tt i] if f il i } i i Hoy — ‘The cold wave was general over the northwest states. Minnesota's lowest temperature was reported from Thief River Falls, where it was 15 degrees above. The Twin Cities, with minimum temperatures of 32 degrees above, were the only points in Minnesota to report that the mercury had not fall- en below freezing point. In South Dakota, the only place reporting a temperature above freezing point was Rapid City, with 36 above. Killing frosts occurred at Camp- bell, Grand Meadow, Minneapolis, Park Rapids, and Thief River Falls, Minn. Reports of heavy frost came from Detroit Lakes, Duluth, Montevi- dco, Moorhead, St. Paul, Minn.; Hur- on and Sioux Falls, 8. D.; and La Crosse, Wis. Registering a low of 25 degrees above or lower in tie northwest were Ada, Campbell, Bemidji, Crookston, De- j troit Lakes, Grand Meadow, Brainerd, Moorhead, New Ulm, Park Rapids, in Minnesota; Milbank, 8. D., and Devils Leke, Grand Forks and Pembina, N. Dak. North Dakotans May Secure Loans from St. Paul Bank Now — St. Paul, Sept. 18.—(#)—Loans asked by North Dakota farmers from the Federal Intermediate Credit bank of St. Paul on state farm storage certificates now are available to them through agricultural credit corpor- ations and banks. This was the comment today of Officials of the credit bank after Sen- ator Gerald P. Nye had made public statement at Washington appcaling to the federal farm board for emer- gency loans because, he said, regular channels for such loans are tied up by red tape. Alex McClusky, for Whose Family City Was Named, Is Dead (Tribune Special Service) McClusky, N. D.. Sept. 18.— Alex |McClusky, Sioux City, Iowa, form- erly a resident of McClusky and a member of the family for which this Alex was a brother of W. H. Mc- Clusky, for whom the city was named. City in 1913. visited his farm here once each to Iowa. The farm i i | ii Fi i ', ‘Vincent ij ? 3 § i E ff E pH a H gf ii it ei i rH HH it : : [ a 8 g Bw I? 3g i : : fi : : : iff Es if af £ i i } E — —< To Porto Rico | Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., will sail soon | from New York for Porto Rico to as | sume duties as governor of the island. | | He is shown here as he arrived in San | Francisco after several months of| adventuring bag er tnied in southern | sia. Negroes Forced to || Stand on Hot Coal ; At Tennessee Home a ° | 18.2 — Memphis, Tenn., S2pt. tary of the Tennessee Children's Home society, charged today that negro inmates of the settlement in- dustrial home here were punished by being placed on hot stoves and made to stand on hot coals and in hot ashes. She also said records of the state department of institutions show 77 children were entered in the school with no record of their discharge. NAVAL CONFERENCE Premier Ramsay MacDonald: Will Issue Them Soon at Undetermined Date ‘Washington, Sept. 18—(4)—Invita- tions to the five power naval confer- ence to be held late in January wiil be issued by Premier Ramsay MacDonald in the near fut- ure, but the exact time remains 2 be determined. This was learned authoritatively to- day and with it came the further in- formation there would be no joint in- vitations on behalf of Grest Britain and the United States as has been suggested in some quarters. Secretary Stimson said today pub- lished dispatches emanating from London that Premier MacDonald al- ready had sent invitations through the British embassies at Tokyo, Paris, and Rome were without authorization, contained many errors, and were en- rely inaccurate. The invitations from the British government will go to the United States, Japan, France and Italy with all five countries expected to parti- cipate in the conference which it is now proposed shall be held in the British capital. Considerable preparatory work must be done before the invitations are sent forward through the British embassies. It may be that action will be de- ferred until after Premier MacDonald has held his conferences with Presi- dent Hoover in Washington early in October on points still in controversy between the United States and Great Britain on the cruiser question, NGHT CLUB BOMBED FOLLOWING BATTLE St. Paul Explosion Heard Two Miles Away Fails to Damage Cafe Paul, Sept. 18—(7)}—A bomb Planted in the rear of the Boule- ascribed the bombing to members of a party which staged a fight in the place carlier in the eve- . A policeman and John J. Lane, Proprietor, were slightly hurt before succeeded in quieting the disputants. One of the men threaten- ed to “blow up the place,” Lane said. police were told, and one alighted, walked behind th: reentercd the machine, speeded away. A few moments later the explosion occurred. Shooting Victim Has Started Suit Against Man Who Injured Him St. Paul. gc 18.—()—Suit for WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1929_ | Poverty of Minnesota Commu- Miss Georgia Tann, executive secre- | 5! INVITATIONS READY : T le Minneapolis Stox THREE REFEREES 10° SETTLE LAND PRICE, === FAMISHED FARMERS LAST WINTER DIG UP |) eee SRE eae eaS I No Santa Claus? First Bank Corporation i Mrs. Edna Holcomb, To Determine Value of Plot! Sick Two Weeks, D Owned by F. A. Lahr Near Funeral. Set Frid the State Prison | Mrs, Edna Holcomb, wife of D | Holcomb and daughter of Mr, | Mrs. Rudy W. Patzman, of 422 TH street, died this afternoon, follo an illness of about two weeks, would have been 28 years of December. The funeral will be held at 8 o’cl Friday morning at St. Mary's chu with interment in St. Mary's cem After 4 o'clock Thursday aft the body will lie in state at her ents’ home. Mrs, Holcomb leaves a son, Richi | 5 years of age, three sisters and brothers—Marion, Dolores, Vit Chicago, Sept. 18—(.P)—Sure, there's a Santa Claus ! Jean Stoddard’s uncle went to sec | [him yesterday. away up there on the | {roof of the world. And the uncle, | Ralph Brooks. sent two-year-old Jean 1a radiogram about it. Brooks is radio ! operator aboard the MacMillan Arctic ship, Bowdoin. “Called on Santa Claus toda: the radiopram. “Not at hon No, Santa Claus? Sure, Santa Cl: CUBS CINCH FLAG AS PIRATES LOSE, Pittsbu pt. 18.) — Pittsburgh t hope for the nity Vanishes Before Rich Harvest of Earth * said Three referees will determine how much the state of Norii Dakota will pay F. A. Lahr for property located near the state penitentiary against which condemnation proceedings were begun last week. A stipulation indicating that a jury will be waived and the question of value of the real property sought to be condemned will be submitted to a board of three referees to be appoint- ed by the trial court was filed with Judge Fred Jansonius in district court ; National League pennant today when | James Morris and Thomas J. Burke, Aimestca, Fox sont Year wie the Pirates lost to Boston, 5 to 4, in} attorney general and assistant attor- an employe of E. A. Brown’s groc the first game of a double header. The | ney gencral, representing the state, now Brown & Tiedman ‘and was Pirates’ defeat | and Dullam and Young, attorneys for: ployed there at the time she | the defgidant. came ill, The e began condemnation pro- j of thei edule of 154 engagements, | ceedings when the board of adminis- and the Pirates will be one gmc | tration passed olution declaring hort. due to postponed games which | that the land was needed for the ex: cannot be decided. If the Pirates! pansion of farm work carried on by |= ’ S should win ail of their 12 remaining | inmates of the state priso ie) Pfunder’s Stomac! Tablets re's a Nollandale, Minn., Sept. 18.—(AP) —In Hollandale, where just six months ago many settler families struggled against virtual starvation, a vein of vegetable gold worth near- ly $4,000,000 has been uncovered in the black muck of their truck farm- ing lands, { Families who lived only on pota toes last spring, dnd sometimes ver little of those, have seen potato wealth take the place of potato pov- erty as they harvest a getable end truck crop worth more than 009,000, it was said toda: Hall, dircetor of produce. m in Minnesota for the Unite Department of Agriculture. Out over the flat 14,000 acres of | Hollandale irrigation project reds of loaded trucks and wag-| crowding the roads where last spring relief expeditions | 11 fall two games short Moe contests as the Cubs dropped all of! "The referees will be appointed by their dozen, the Bruins would be half | judge Jansol eee set forth through snow drifts to car-) 4 dat tight tallvenOuui= | soos: eneontue = \ ty food and clothing to 120 suffering | per 6, standing then would be: ° eT = can_now be obtained at fami strict. Won Lost’ Percent 2 Melinski Children == i Horses that died last winter from | c 1. 93 59 “Gl Die Within 24 H . = HALL’S DRUG STORE tareation have een replaced b 60 te Within OUTS 2 ‘Third and Broadway well-fed teams sts = Jamestown, N. children, mont ; wealth drawn from the reclaimed lake bed as between 50 and 8&5 carleads of 18—Two TMM 18 aged AGKS potatoes are shipped to market each | old, s¢ ia bucks, | Josep! R Farmers who petitioned the court | tiled within less than 24 hours of cach Capital Funeral last winter for relief from their other, one at home and the «cher obligations when they found that| ee cauy eed ine Parlors $500 an acre land and 30 cents New York, Sept. 18——Babe |The baby passed away Sunday ai bushel potatoes did not. mix, Ruth hit Mie Ath home Tun os ewe morning about 9 o'clock and the 203 Main Avense daughter Tuesday morning at5o’clock. | thing that a $1,000 an acre the first inning of the Licensed Embalmer P season in 5 abbas Sn and $500 any acre land leave a tidy opening came in today's double head- | THe baby's death was caused by con- Phone—Day or Night—28 um in the bank. ; yer between the Yankees and the In- jj) ,0"S is. bondiélon “teoha: Heaves ‘A. baiper’ vtopi-of ligt secndelaiane Aaiiiee asin i na ous condition from heart Jos. W. Tschumperlin ' ; box troubl y, it was said, bringing ex-/for Cleveland and the bases were ional prices will, in some cases, | empty. off all the debts which the set- tlers incurred during the past three adverse years, and in addition per- mit them to pay for their land pur- | and pneumonia for a w having been brought to Trinity hos pital in a very scrious condition sev eral days ago. The children are survived parents and thr rs Prop. ceptir by their ind three chased under 20 year contract. Other | Neue Bie meine ae the Gare] root crops and garden truck also are rington Catholic church at nine! showing good yields, according tol ; o'clock and burial was made in Hall, and these, too, are bringing good prices though the acreage is smaller, Eight Become Citizens ithe cemetery there. 18.—(?)—Margaret} 9 eg of Chartes/ No More Gas in indicted president Delos Waggoner. " . of the Bank of ‘Telluride, Colo, ar-| Stomach and Bowels Before Judge Englert | rived nore today in answer to federal —— mminens subpoenaes to appear before the If you wish to be permanently re- lprand jury investigating the manipu- |lations by which Waggoner fraudu |lently obtained $500,000 credit from six New York banks. Margaret 5. Who is alleged to have had a in sending six fake That empty, gnawing feeling at the telegrams irom Denver which aided! pit of the stomach wili disappear; Waggoner in carrying out his scheme,! that anxious, nervous fecling with was expected to testify before the) heart palpitation will vanish, and you grand jury tod: | will again be able to take a deep Waggoner already has been indict-| breath without discomfort. ed for mail fraud but the probe is That drowsy, being coniinued to discover who 7 son. helped the smail town banker obtain After their admittance, the appli-jthe half million dollars from six of cants were presented with U. 8,|New Yor! t financial houses. ' flags, flag codes and other patriotic — Mterature by the local G. A. R. and American Legion Auxiliary. Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 18.—Eight residents of Barnes county were ad- mitted as citizens to the United States at a naturalization hearing held be- fore Judge M. J. Englert at the court- house. They were Mrs. Annie Russel, Mrs. Hannah Schmidt, Hartwig Johnard, Rev. Thomas Alfred Simpson, Paul Noeske, Oscar Sunde, and Sverre Martinson, all of Valley City; Walde- mar Deering, of Pillsbury; and Ole Rasmuzson and John Kehl of Eckel- and bowels, lets, which for stomach ad effects resulting | lieved of gas in stom ¢ Baalmann's C re prepared especia Ras and all the | from gas pressure. ing after desire for Ss will no ‘0 to sleep” Tablets pre- ng with the Get the genuine, in the {| ge, at any good drug | arms and longer feel cold and because Baalmann's vent gas from inter: circulation. Samuel Osgood of M: {was the postm: {under the constitution. from 1789 to 179! The condor probably ascends to a greater altitude than any other bird. | It is believed sometimes to reach a height of four miles. Always on hand at LENHART DRUG CO. —Adv. The Trar miles long. Nothin o Newer than hodays Hudson The greatness of Hudson value is expressed with unparalleled power in the way its NEWNESS stands out among the Newest and Latest models the industry offers. Here we find feature after feature of Hudson’s origination, now offered in the new models of the more expensive cars. And, Hudson still is alone ig offering the almost individual distinction of such wide color choices, at no extra cost. See and 4 examine the new offerings of other makers : by all means. Then come, compare and drive K . the Greater Hudson. You, too, must feel the 4 spontancous enthusiasm that has rolled up a landslide approval for its beauty, quality and value —expressed in sales that for the first seven months of 1929 exceed the total of the entire year preceding. Here we find, featured as new, such advan- tages as radiator shutters—first introduced and for years standard with Hudson. SUPER-SIX SALES Here we find Hudson type brakes, Hudson principle. Nothing has been produced to Phone 306 BISMARCK, N. DAK. SALES AND SERVICE IN ADJACENT TERRITORY: type shock absorbers. Counterbalanced erankshafts are much to the fore, which seek touch its value and price advan- tage. It is still the master car in to approximate the efficiency and ‘| 5 and up at factory ve performance and reliability. A.C, Dance, E. D. ROSE, Manager.