The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 5, 1929, Page 3

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a =. { a ! | | 4| al | 4 | a, i! . ISHBEL MACDONALD THINKS RECEPTION “WAS WONDERFUL’ Smiling Daughter of Britain's Premier Calls on Wash- ington Women Washington, Oct. 5.—(—Miss Ish- bel MacDonald was up early on her first morning in the American cap- ital, held a conference with women newspaper correspondents, and then started a round of early calls which included visits to Mrs. Dolly Gann, Mrs. Stimson, Mrs. Taft, and Mrs. Massey, wife of the Canadian min- ister. “Is there room for everybody?” were the first words ‘of the smiling daugh- ter of Britain's premier as she greeted the correspondents. Her father was not present, having a full program of his own for the morning. Men cor- respondents also were absent. Speaking of the reception in New York and Washington, she exclaimed: “It was wonderful, much more wonderful than I had anticipated.” She, however, added, she personally preferred the quieter greeting she and her father received upon their arrival in America two years when her father was not the head of the British government. “But please do not misunderstand me or think me lacking in apprecia- tion,” she said. “I'd like a quict re- ception, but I appreciated the warmth of yesterday's greeting.” She said that she planfied to make her father's program in Washington very much her own. DOLLY CURTIS GANN NEARLY MISSES ISHBEL Washington, Oct. 5—()—Mrs. Dolly Curtis Gann. sister and official hostess to Vice President Curtis, near- ly missed a call today from Miss Ish- hel MacDonald as a result of a morn- ing trip to market. At the Gann home it was said the visit of the British premier's daughter Was unexpected and for a time there was uncertainty whether Mrs. Gann could be located and return home in time. Miss MacDonald, however, had not arrived before Mrs. turned. New York Stocks All. Chem. & Dye Am. Can Am. Internal . Am. Loco . Am. SM & Am. Sur: Am. T. Am. Tob. Anaconda ..... Andes Cop. Min. Atehison ... : be) arnsdall th, Sicel ses Miz. Cai. & Hecia Cansdian Pac. Cerro D2 Paco Chez. & Ohio ..... 59 87's 123 Kian ‘ 63 Cal. Gramsnnor 49 Col. Gas & Elec. 139 ¥ Gas ....c00e 47's M.K. & T. Missouri Pi Montgomery Ward Nash Motors ... National Cash Register ... New York Central .... Packard Pan American Pet Par. Fam. Las. . Penn RR .. Phiilips Pet. . Sears Roebuck ... Sin. Con. Oil Ecuth. Pac. Southern Ry. St. Oil Cal. 6&t. Ou NI. St. Ol NY . Studebaker ‘Texas Corp. . Tex, Guit Sulphur . Tob. Priducts Union Pac . U. 8. Rubber . U. &, Steel... Vanadium . Warner Bre:. Westh. Elec. . Willys-Over. . Woetworth . Amn. and For. Pover .. Echulte Stores ... 20% “eaboard Airline . » 16% BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bicmarek, Oct. 5 9, 1 dark northern No. 1 northern .. No. 1 ember durum . No, 1 mixed durum Neo. 1 rsd durum No. 1 flax No. 2 flax No. 1 rye . Dariey ... Oats ..... Speltz, per cvt Hard winter wheat . Daris hard winter wheat . SEEMS REAS< NABLE She: Why do 66 meny women rest, their chins on their hands when they are thinkine? ‘tir “euths ehut ro Gann re-| : {able records. Much comment anent ; | files” he said, so the reports of six | » {tax cupervisors wers thrown in the | |Success in Traill County Brings More Nonpartisan Meets (Continued From Page One) | Oluf Erickson, secretary of the Wat- | ford City Farmers Union, inserted an ad in the Parmer and Guide, an- nouncing the gathering and the ap- | pearance of four Union speakers who would answer for any questionable | Operations of the organization. In- cluded was an invitation to the editor of the paper. The editor did not accept the invi- | tation. ie the meeting, however, tthe | Burdick of Fargo, one of the speakers and an attorney for the | Union, called on the editor. Burdick, the Farmer and Guide says, failed to explain matters in a satisfactory manner, but promised to mail the desired information upon ac- tivities of the Union. Burdick did ad- mit, the paper says, that the Union dispatched organizers and lecturers over the state who were unable to in- telligently answer questions put to them by the farmers. The Union, apparently, is desirous of keeping within the good graces of folks in McKenzie county. On November 14, A. C. Townley | and William D. Upshaw open a series of debates which will cover the larger towns of the state. Reports that the debaters will di- | vide the gate receipts after the Anti- | Saloon league has taken 25 per cent and after expenses have been paia have brought on some skepticism. Admission charge, it is said, will be | either 50 or 75 cents. Whether the | debates will be for information on the liquor traffic, entertainment or for commercial reasons are questions in the minds of Bismarck people. “Upshaw may be some pumpkins down in Georgia,” says the Killdecr Herald. “but we think that when Townley gets through with him in North Dakota he will be just a plain | toothache. There is such a thing as taking in too much territory. If the valiant southern dry thought Townley would duck a challenge of any kind for debate, he is just all wet.” The La Moure County Chroaicle believes the debates should bring out some fire with the peppery Upshaw on one side and the more calm, suave Townley, with the soothing voice, on the other. “J. W. Brinton once called Townley |the ‘Master of Mob Psychology.’ At least. he knows how to obtain mass effects and is bound to get some fol- | lowers,” the paper says. sees ' Information contained on district! tax supervisors’ reports discarded by T. H. Thorescn, former state tax) commissioner, considers them vélu- | jthe missing reports has com: recently | from I. V. A. press supporters. | “Mr. Thoresen wanted to ‘ciear the | | wastebasket. He has been devoting | his time to attacks on Governor | George F. Sharer for what he calls ‘failure to keep faith.’ He will have | to find a much better excuse if he is| going to evare the charge of bad faith himself.” . The above comes from the Fargo ry Forum. Mr. Thoresen on the contrary de- clares the records valueless to the present incumbent and of a nature not required even to be kept as office files. Thoresen’s friends refer to the whole affatr as a tempest in a teapot and coming under the caption “Pea- nut Politics.” ee ® Speaking of the state farm storage } act, not a single loan on a state cer- tificate has been made by a banker in Bismarck or Mandan. Scores of applications, however, are reported to have been received by country banks in the surrounding area. Either the farmers do .10t look favorably upon tle measure or they are not in need of emergency funds. That farmers with standing in the community may borrow from the banks without ~ storage certificate of the state is the general statement of bankers here. Much fault has been found with the ctate farm storage act, advocated by Governor Shafer and passed by the I. V. A. faction. The I. V. A. press explains that the law will undoubted- ly cause the farmer to realize a great deal more fer his recent crop than if the law was not on the statute books. Just how this greater ‘1.come will be realized is not dealt with by these papers. | City-County Briefe | Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Berg and Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Fogle, Linton, at- tended the Mandan-Linton football game here yesterday afternoon. 4 if ' Miss Freda Anderson, who has been a patient in the Dickinson hospital since Labor day, recovering from in- Juries sustained in an auto accident. was able to return to Bismarck this week. Miss Anderson is employed by the O. W. Will Seed company. E. F. Erickson and H. C. Boardman of the Erickson-Boardman company left yesterday for Chicago where they will attend the twenty-sixth annua! convention of the Advertising Special- ty association, to be held at the Stevens hotel. A feature of the con- vention will be a display of the products of calendar and advertising specialty manufacturers from all Parts of the United States. The regular mecting of jarck Lodge No. 5, A. F. and A. M., will be held Monday cvening at 7:30 at the Masonic temple. Mrs. Theodore Musgjerd will leave tomorrow for Fergus Falls, Minn.. to attend the funeral of her brother, Emil Prandt, whose death occurred Friday. Funeral services will be held Monday morning. R. L. Nordness, Huron, 8. D., and D. C., Penniman, Fargo, manager and assistant manager, respectively, far North and South Dakote for the In vestors’ Snydicate. holding a sa; meeting here today with local rep- resentatives of the organization. new showhouse! ... tertainments of the N Paramount Theatre! Come to Each. of these Great Opening Shows You'll marvel at the beauty of this luxurious glorious all-talking, singing, musical screen en- any among the thousands who came yesterday to the grand opening of Bismarck’s beautiful You'll thrill to these ew Show World! Ask Showing Mon. and Tues. | Additional Sports Lynn Nelson to Throw Against |Fargo Youth Selected by Zwil- ling; New Yorkers’ Slug- ging Bothers Blues Kansas City, Oct. 5.—(@—The Ro- {chester Red Wings. International |League champions, and the Kansas | | City Blues, American Association pen- jmant winners, will resume their fight in the junior world series at 2 o'clock | this afternoon, hooking up in the} third game of the series. Yesterday was an off day in the; schedule, affording the Red Wing | board of strategy opportunity to for- ;mulate plans to add another victory | | to the 11 to 2 lambasting handed the Blues Thursday, while Manager Zwill- ing and his Blues ruminated over the | one sided defeat with a view to forc- | Stalling any such powerful batting at- itack as was unleashed by South- worth’s men in Thursday's game. Kansas City barely eked out a vic- tory in Wednesday's opening game 4 to 3, and has shown no such hitting | punch as that displayed by the New| | Yorkers. Zwilling has chosen Lynn “Ding” Nelson, Fargo, N. D.. right hander, to | Start today’s game, while Southworth | Plans to use either Larry Irvin, his | Only southpaw, or Paul Derringer, a right hander. Rochester has plenty of pitching strength left, having used | only two hurlers, Bell and Carleton. | The Blues have sent four to the hili | Only Tom Sheehan, who pitched Wednesday's winning game, showed | ability to fool the Red Wing batsmen The teams will play their final gam~ ‘here Sunday, then entrain for Ro- chester, where play will continue un- til one team has won five games. | Estimate of Hot Dog Consumption Is Still Uncertain By DALE HARRISON t Chicago, Oct. 5.—(4—If all the hot dogs to be eaten during the world serles at Wrigley field were linked together they would make a chain i | sausage from Pinconning, Mich., to! | Gauley Bridge, W. Va. | | The estimate is approximate. Accu- | tacy in such cases is impossible. Th> | Weather will have much to do with it.| | If the games should go extra innings | the chain might even reach as far as Atlanta, Ga. J Demand for puppy pastry will be \greater if the weather be overcoai | than if it be shirtsleeve. Rochester Nine "2.2222 ———e! Advance statistics on pop are stitt | about at Wrigley Field until next more vague. If all the pop that will be drunk were dumped into Lake | Michigan at game time it might or might not make the perch turn a delicate salmon color. A painstaking canvass among pop purveyors at the park failed to dis- even a wild guess as to the possible Indeed, one of the popmen declared ; indignantly that pop did not cause consumption. It is somewhat easier to predict | how of peanuts will be | Hlotenerisea If the abretite: for thes | Wrigley Fleld tomorrow against. the | roasted delicacy holds up to previous series, nine out of every ten customers will be sitting in a mess of shucks before the game is half over. There Chinese saying that peanuts and eball, Damon and Pythias, ham and eggs are, alike, one and in- separable. One thing that may be prophesied with confidence is that the brigade of pop, peanut and popcorn peddlers will be in such numbers as to make many thousands of customers angry. That will come about in this wi Just as Hornsby, Wilson, Foxx or ic kes his stance at the id just as he gets set to pul- inch the pellet, or whatever 1 socking the ball on the t al that moment a pop almost certainly will arise from nowhere and completely ob- struct the ‘ons who custom is maddening. The practice of blocking the view is a native habit of the whitecoated gentry sires to purchase pop, there isn't a popman in sight. When one does not desire to purchase pop, popmen pop up in droves. Opening Pitchers Is Big Problem for Connie, McCarthy Neither Manager Will Announce Hurlers Until a Few Min- utes Before Game Philadelphia, Oct. 5.—(4%)—Conni> Mack has been asked so many times { recently who will pitch the first game for the Athletics in the world series ¢ is getting tired answering. Well, I can say truthfully,” is Mack's invariable reply, “that right now I don’t know, and I don’t think I will know until the series is about to start, ‘I haven't decided even whether it will be a right-hander or a left- hander. All you questioners can keep right on guessing. but nobody will know who is going in until 15 minutes. before game time.” Most cf the dopesters believe Earn- shaw, the A’s star right-hander, will draw the opening assignment against the C ‘The is virtually nothing to worry ne pill, annihilate the horse- |) played is rea stomer's view. To per-| $6.60 this cannibalistic | at Wrigley field. When one de-| | | i i THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1929 Tuesday at 1:30 p.m, when worry- ing will start in earnest. Neither Joe McCarthy. on the thr hold of his first. world series as man- ager of the Chicago Cubs, nor Con- nie Mack, to whom world series are ‘cover anyone who cared to venture | ld stories, has viewed with alarm the Each has indicated ball club nad re- | approaching test jconfidence in h spect for his advet | The Cubs had the matter of fin- lishing their National Leaguc schedule | /Still to consider; a game today at Cin- | | cinnati and the season's finale at | Pittsburgh Pirates. Neither contest | was causing McCarthy to hold his | jbreath, and yet the Sabbath game | ad an element of human interest in that the Cubs’ pitcher is to be Henry Grampp. getting his first start | jwith the Cubs after having ithe club for three years. | i Grampp’s du on the Cubs consist of giving the team bat | practice during the season. |McCarthy two days ago in Cincin- Inati told Chicago baseball writers they could choose the pitcher for the finale game, they voted to a man for Grampp, so Grampp it will be. The playing field where the first two games of the October classic will Its seating capa- city of about 40,000 has been aur- mented by construction of extra bleachers that rise above sidewalks outside the park. The cost of con- \structing these seats is said to have been greater than any possible re- jturn they may make. They represent | {an effort on the part of William | Wrigley, Jr., owner of the Cubs, to! provide as many fans as possible seats for the games. i REDUCE GRAIN RATES Washington, Oct. 5.——The tn-| terstate corfmerce commission today | granted permission to midwestern railroads to reduce freight rates on| grain and grain products approxi | Malm Phone 243 mately seven cents per 100 pounds! and Missouri to the Gulf of Mexic from Omaha. St. Louis, Cairo, Mem-| The reductions will be in effect phis and points in Kansas, Nebraska,| tween Oct. 10 and Oct. 25. TIOLENE WORLD’S FINEST MOTOR OIL Saves you °12 a year Figures prove it? Superlatives and claims prove nothing. You can use Tiolene -- the oil that’s expertly refined from the world's highest grade crude — Pure Pennsylvanio—and be $1.20 ahead every time you change oil. Here are the figures: 10,000 miles or a 10,000 miles or a year’s service on Ordinary Oil service on TIOLENE *Driving 00 miles per fill “Driving 1000 miles por Alt 20 fille—6 gts. per fill- 120 qt 10 fille—6 qts. per fI—60 qta, at 25 cente—930 at 30 conte 918 Tiolene Saving—$12 a Year *Tiolene gives BETTER motor protection for 1000 miles than ordinary oils give for 500 Tiolerfe Product of THE PURE OIL CO. CORWIN-CHURCHILL MOTORS, COPELIN MOTOR COMPANY SCOTTY'S SERVICE STATION Look for the Pure Cil blue punsps and signs The new Philco Quality at a Price You can’t beat it! ure to hear the new Philco before you buy. ae rr Se ES CALL or PHONE for DEMONSTRATION, Service Station Bismarck, N. Dak. 114 Second Street Shews: “ILLUSION” 2:80-7-9 Matinees, 10c and 35¢ — Nights, 15¢ and 50c A dramatic modern story from Arthur Train’s best-selling novel of Fifth Avenue and luxurious country places on Long Island. You'll hear Nancy sing “Illu- sicn.” You'll hear Buddy croon this song hit, too! You'll see a beauty chorus of thirty girls hot-step the new hit, “Revolutionary Rhythm.” All in a glamorous, new show world entertainment — guaranteed Paramount hit! “Buddy Nancy Carroll June Collyer All Talking Make every stop on auto- mobile row. See all the new models. Still you'll find only . one full-size, five-passenger, eight-cylinder automobile under *1000—the Roosevelt. Full-size, four-door, éve-passenger: 5 : Broadcloth upbol- Marmon-built engine. . ; . (Same desiga smaller bore as ia higher priced Marmoa Bights). smooth eight-cylinder acceleration. roaderfully steering and easy clutch actioa. :.. four-wheel Brakes.» Lusurious long wheelbase riding quality. ALL AT STEEN Quick, 116 Second Street EEA eae TEE feodess. . . . 70- One- ‘piece be] MARMON BISMARCK, N. DAK.

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