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CITY TO INTERVENE IN RATE CASE WITH | MANDAN AND MINOT | Association of Commerce De- | cides to Be Represented by Expert in Arguments Bismarck aha Mandan wil! join in » the railway cl ate case which comes to an oral argument before + the interstate cammerce comm y at Washington Octob: 5. Action is taken Wednestiay by the Associ- jon of Commerce to be represented jointly with Minot at this hearing The association will retain Oliver W. Tong, a rate specialist from Min- neapolis. in conjunction with the two ) other cities. Minot assumes half of the ost and Bismarck will pay two-thirds of the other half, leaving the re- to be met by Man- p sists of F. M. Davis, C. A. L » Carl Nelson The object of the class rates 4s to obtain a westwa | the base line of the ra | At present this line is set in along the course of t to Jamestown and O: | Fasgo and north to € whence it would continue ca: Duluth Minot and the state railroad com- > mission are contending for fixing th Montana state line as the pro) boundary on the west. All the | mony to uphold this contention is and the Washington session of the commission on the matter will be | devoted solely to oral argument. Fay | Harding, member of the state com | mission, will sit with the interstate The arguments on behalf of the stat | will be presented by E. M. Hend: fate expert of the state body. and Mr. ) Tong, provided the interstate com- Mission permits him to intervene at this late day. If a place cannot be made for the | Minneapolitan in the argument he will turn his views over to Mr. Hen- @ricks for incorporation in the latter's Presentation of th 's case. | SHOULD TAKE STAN Wants Executive to Approve Other Parts of Controver- sial Tariff Bill Washington, Sept. 26.—(AP)— Senator Borah, Republic: Idaho, ' Baid in the senate today that Pr dent Hoover, having thrown his in fluence behind the flexible principle in the pending” tariff discussions, must “go through to the end and sume the responsibility” for other parts of the measure. Borah asserted he would not crit- fcize the president for ing his statement urging retention of the flexible tariff policy adopted seven years ago but now that M: oover had entered the controversy it was his duty to say whether he approved other parts of the bill. “It is the duty of the president,” he added, “to advise this body and the country in the same plain and specific way whether the industrial Schedules in this bill meet with his approv n opponent of the flexible prin- ciple, paign, said that if the chief execu- tive has established a precedent by issuing his statement on the tariff, the action would be condemned by “It is not my idea of the division ment under the constitution,” ided, the practice had! Pr on for about 60 years| anc therefore he could not with j tification criticize Mr. Hoover. revision. - To Hold Quarterly _ Conference Friday ‘The last quarterly conference of | “McCabe Methodist congregation for this year will be held at 8 o'clock, | ‘Friday evening, in the church par- ‘tors. This is the most important congregational conference of the year. Rev. G. LeRoy White, the district a » Will preside. All the | ob of the year will be gone over | | and reports will be reed by all leaders | ‘Gf the congregational departments. | 9 of the conference will be le——__—______—. 2 ines OWA BANK BANDITS BORAH SAYS HOOVER Beene eho erieed it: | Fargo Man Identified Hoover in the last election cam-| of duties of the various branches of j 5,1 man who robbed them last | FOR RENT—An. unfur: | FOR RENT— : || Supposed Corpse | Suddenly Sits Up , pee Mexico City. Sept. 26.—(AP)-— While being brought to Mexico City in an automobile from Ixtapalapa state, where he was found hanging te a telegraph pole, Maximino Vi ganon, supposed to be # corp up and demanded a drink. The men accompanying became nie trieken, Valganon is in a risus condition, unable to tell what Ied to |the hanging. wo MOBBERS SHOOT COP AND SNATCH $25,000 Constable Jerry McDonald of Will Die, Doctors Say nond. Calif, Sept unexpectedly into a bank at the Rodeo branch of the of Pinole today, Constable Jer: McDonald opened fire on two bandi shot one and was shot twice thrc the chest The robbers escaped with loot esti- mated at $25.000. Haspital aut | aid McDonald probably we die. STEAL OVER $3,000 President, Cashier and Custom- er Locked in Vault of Turin Institution ing entered the Turin Savings bank at Turin. Iowa. near here, got between $3.000 and $4.000 and made their escape after locking the bank's president, cashier | and a customer in the vault. The robbers appeared to be middle | aged, one fairly tall, the other short | and stout. One wore a red sweater. | On entering the bank the bandits made the bank president, Ralph Dor- woord, and the cashier lic on the | floor while they scooped up all cash ; jin sight. While they were scooping the money, a customer entered and , | before leaving. the bandits forced him | and the bank officers into the vault. | CHILDREN OVERCOME _ BY MONOXIDE GASES | } | Minneapolis, Sept. 26.—(AP)— Five children, ranging in age from two to five years, were overcome The others were d by a fire department emer-| [ren squad. | The five were playing in the kitch- Jen of the south Minneapolis home of Virgil and Raymond Segelstrot jard three years old respective! {with the doors closed and the gas flames burning on tho kitchen range. The flame is said to have exhaus ed the oxygen in the air and when Mrs, R. Segelstrom opened the door, she found her two sons and th jaymates unconscious on the floor. | Raymond and Virgil were hurried to| the hospital. | ' serious condition. | reviv | As Twin City Hold-up' St. Paul, Sept. 26—7)—Lewis Mc- Nevin of Minneapolis and Fargo, N. D., was identified today by 10! holdup victims at a police “showup”) spring. McNevin, 24, was yesterday released | from a hospital, where he had been, under treatment for gunshot wounds suffered May 29 in an alleged attempt to hold up a filling station. McNevin is shot as he attempted to flee after he had been arrested. He is scheduled to appear in police court today on a charge of highway robbery. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY | LOST—In downtown district a bunch | of keys on key zing. Had 5 or 6! Finder please return to Trib- | FOR SALE—A Majestic range. priced FOR SALE—Modern bungalow, two bedrooms, built-ins. Garage. A bar- gain. Phone 982 or call at 211 W. Rosser. FOR RENT—Nicely furnished sleep- ing room in modern home, close in. oi at 406 First street or phone ished two or three room apartment, hot water heat, aiso furnished sleeping roqms. Inquire 111 Ave. A West. RENT—In modern home, one} two room furnished apartment, al- Seventh street or phene 981-R. lige warm room in new modern bungalow. Also free room to girl in exchange for a few eve- * FOUND UNCONSCIOUS serene s-ae Richmond, Calif. Probably | 26. 1m) — | side it. by carbon monoxide gas today and, #re expected pee .. 2 s!two are in the general hospital in! te determine what action to take.! Which this week totaled over £3,000,- | Upshaw Will Debate | William D. Upshaw, former Gi jlawyer, had written Upshaw | mill and elevator, $100,000. The mill reasonable for quick sale. Call at! Feige oe at Jamestown ‘LHE BISMAK! RICH MANUPACTURER] | Judge During Hunt | ‘broadcast story that General ‘WITH BLOODY W | Chicago Man Near Death From | *as denied today by Mr. Baruch. ui ; An account of the shooting w: Blow; Female Companion _j riven last night over station WOR | Dazed With Liquor J e Pershing accidentally shot and slightly wounded Richard P. Lydon, New | York supreme court justice, while hunting grouse this summer on the {Alexander Wollcott, dramatic critic. |Later he told reporters he learned of ithe incident from two Pesan o a (Pt 1s M.i the shooting party. The general an peli aa carp rent Ula id the justice, he said, were in two shoot- was ing boxes, and when ragietced Aig) at fatally injured today in the south side] # Grouse some of the bird shot en- apartment of a Florence Jacobs, | tered ha aed face, inflicting 35. His skull had been fractured by ‘a heavy-blow behind the car. The| Mr. Baruch denied the story. PLANE PROSPECTORS 0 custody. An anonymous telephone report of | Dozen Aviators to Scour North- west Barren Lands for a shooting brought police to the place. | Eight Missing Men i Keckley, 62, well to do manufacturer. s found unconscious and probably [On the upper porch they found a | pool of blood and a small knife be- They knocked several times before the stupefied woman admitted them and they found Keckley “ing on a couch. “IT cut my finger, e replied dully, hen asked to explain the blood. She id Keckley had been a frequent caller, and this was confirmed by the man’s son, O. C. Keckley, head of the manufacturing concern which bears | his name. The son said Mrs. Keckley died seven years ago and his father | da had visited Mrs. Jacobs frequently for the last five ov six years. Toronto, Sept. widespread search for a party of cight prospectors ing two weeks in two airplanes in the barren lands of the northwest. ‘The police also arrested Leo Lang-| A message received at the offices lois, 30, who said he had roomed in} here of the dominion explorers from the apartment four years. He said/Captain J. Blanchette at Stony he had been awakened by the sourtd; Rupids in northwestern Saskatche- of an argument on the back porch|wan said four planes had taken off but had gone to sleep again. Just!from there on an 800-mile hop to before the police arrived, Langlois; Beverley Lake, one of the scheduled said, he awakened and discovered the | stepping points on the flight of the ded man. missing prospector: “I asked Mrs. Jacobs what hap- ie message said should the pened.” he said. “She only replied: | search about Beverley Lake prove ‘He got what was coming to him.’ fruitless it would be extended to Mrs. Jacobs ts a widow. Her six-/ Pelley Lake. ' year-old daughter was not in the! Neanwhile, other planes apartment & police arrived. ing towards the ‘hich the missing ion over jators had | Chilly weather prevails over the entire north lands with unfavorable HASN'T TAKEN GRAIN ss sos. |. The missing men are Col. C. D. Hye ed Dgervie vs ied tel : xplorers; pilots C. A. Thom All Concerns in State, With Ex-: en ans McMillan: Richesd i i . | Pearce, geologist; W. A. Broadway ception of One in James- | aies “Milne, Major N. Baker and F. town, Cooperate Good! idnvestigation of ‘several, hundred Bank of England Gold vators is is Ei y se | 2. it. which elevator operiters: arate: = ton — sed to Stop we fusing to store grain if they have room ee it, O. E. Johnson told the| state railroad board upon his return . {eGmbASSnnpection tip. London, Sept. 26.—(AP)—Direc- A Jamestown elevator, Johnson tors of the Bank of England today had used a rubber stamp on its|Taised the bank rate one per cent ht tickets to advise farmers that | from. the five and one half per cent grain received was subject to/ level fixed in February, 1929. orage. The step was taken in order to Members of the railroad board Protect the bank's gold stock, due d to confer later today|t¢ the continued outflow of gold, The practice clearly is i ,, 000 and which, since the beginning Se early, i Mlegaly they oe the eat, totals Zehnens00, Business experts say today’s rise to store grain, Johnson said, be-| Wil! be a handicép to trade and in- use they are practically full. These | dustry, but the authorities think it are reserving only enough space to|iS necessary to attract to London n some cases elevators are refus-| | Scotland estate of Bernard M. Baruch, | ee w | flown, It was expected more than a dozen planes would shortly be en-} | Baged in the search. | KIBUNE. * Deny Pershing shot 'INORTH DAKOTA BANK LOANS ON STORAGE their grain to do so at their near-| rifting away. =, Relief from Gas Stomach Pains Dizzi The doctors tell us that 90 per cent of all sickness is due to stom. ach and bowel troubles. You can't be well i ped digestion is bad; you are likely to get sick unless you relish food and Sgest it properly. permit farmers who wish to market | SMe of the gold which has been Darrow, Townley or Lanier in Jamestown Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 26.—(7}— ongressman and prohibition advo- cate, wants to take on Clarence Dar- tow, A. C. Townley or P. W. Lanier in a@ debate. Lanier, a local letter taking issue with the latter's prohibi- tion views. Upshaw issued his chal- lenge in a speech last night in the Presbyterian church here. Shafer Loans Shafer $100,000 for Mill Use Governor George Shafer, as chair- man of the state industrial commis- lon, yesterday voted to loan George FP. Shafer, as manager of the state or » constipation, or seh ie you have no appetite, already has a heavy grain inventory are ne but the money will be uséd to buy more and to pay for grain now in transit, the governor said. The money will be loaned by the Bank of North Dakota, which is controlled by the industrial commission. sae eee today Money back if it doesn’ help you. _ Enrollment Grows ——____ SEIZE $15,000 IN JEWELS Chicago, Sept. 26.—(#)—Three masked bandits bound and. Mrs. Florence Shaver in her Coast apartment, last night and es- Caped with jewelry valued at $16,000. Clyde Tennis, Detroit real estate man | | Mev. blemelespreceives suffers Sven ee ee || oe Goitre Not a Disease || Regiesthor rem out tubes Tube out Far | North Paul HUKSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1929 Bank Stock Corporation and the Fed- eral Reserve and Intermediate Cred- | it Corporation. di Some banks of the state were said eady to be making loans on stor- age certificates and others were completing arrangements to do s Muskogee, Okla. Sept. 26. on All conferees declared that | Col. Arthur C. Goebel paced the Mex- ing Tl ETSIS AGREED it was imperative that such loans| ico City-Kansas City air derbyists| collapsed te the ot be made quickly to mect any emer-| into Muskogee today on the flight wena ed e street will Extra Special Prices in 3 sack lots or over. In order to get cleaned up and get more room, we make this special price on 3 sack lots or over at Fancy Face and Fill per bo: Jumbo Peppers, per bushel . Phone 571 Money on Storage Certifi- cates in State go, N. D., Sept. 26.—(AP)— Dakota banks and correspon-! Corporation show the fullest c¢o- dent banks in Minneapolis and St./ operation in making the North Dako- make stored on North Dakota farms in accordance with the storage law and will otherwise cooperate with the state administration to {statute a success, {resolution adopt conference here today. The resolution was adopted at the close of a conference of the execu- tive council of bunkers association, with other state | has spent much of her life under the bankers, and representatives of the|sea. She is the daughter of J. E. Northwest Bancorporation, the First! Williamson, leader of an expedition | be i POTATOES Potatoes - Potatoes gency in the state, and to enable farmers to hold grain on farms until better marketing conditions. |. The resolution adopted follows: | “Be it resolved that it is the sense jof this meeting that North Dakota bankers present, Twin City bankers represented, the Federal Reserve Bank, and the Intermediate Credit THE FEDERAL RARDWARE & . OLD RELIABLE w. An Old Line—Legal cous Waa ethos sing ra teaee ct Preferred «> hoa J. F. Griffin, state agent loans on grain|ta Grain Storage act a success, that WR chicntied it be known that these bankers are cognizant of the serious situation in the state and need for such credit, make the! and be it further resolved that ban! to alers of state make loans in acco inkers | dance with grain storage act.’ ” SPENDS LIFE UNDER SEA New York, Sept. 26.—(#)— Sylvia ‘Williamson is seven months old and secueen at the ba the North Dakota One Pound Sugar Free Patt Coffee. Specially Priced at ‘ $1.85 per bushel While they last. at the following Good Will Stores Logan's Geo, Lit oe wh sent A. paral crore & Tiedman Bismarck Quality Store Bertsch Grocery Davis Grocery ‘ $1.75 per bushel CASH and NOT DELIVERY qe eewaen B. Thompson : ichholt’s Grocery S. Nicola APPLES | i ae Yegen's Grocery . J ngmuir Grocery Nacssessess B48 t0$1.79 Sunshine Grocery Marcovitz Grocery Montgomery Gyocery South Si ; Spohaairscny jouth Side Grocery Matt Senger Mandan Stores J. Marcovitz Grocery J. W. Atkinson Joe Baron & Co. ; 1 Morck’: 6. ae M.S. ang : . ite <i — Opposite Standard Oil Co.'s Warehouse Tony Sissinni Fred Kist ERS saluaretnsennnne, $210 South Side Grocery i i f ek | en of O.K.’d Used Cars ---- at the Lowest Prices in our History i i & F} 1 i ss wei coal, and as ben ter -_ om fey oR lala Attached to the radiator cap of each of our recon- —_— —— pag ain gy «range ogee CHEVROLET SEDAN, fully Counts” tag. This tag shows you exactly le ier ormer ovoer sot tis at rahe what vital units of the car have been reconditioned bolstering, finish, "and * mechanical or marked “‘O: K.” by our expert mechanics. It is ae your abeolute assurance of quality and value. hevrolet Company, The weather was so hot in W: ion, D. C., recently oa hi on the hot pliveenegts” Biomerck, N. Dak. One 5-pound pail Princess Patt Coffee, 5 lbs. gran- ulated sugar free $2 99 with ‘every, pound of Princess Friday and Saturday ' '