The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 4, 1929, Page 7

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a a STREME CORT) [rater tersuasxovs J PASS ON N. D, PLEA Will Review State Freight Case Protested by Railroaa { Commissioners | Washington, D. C., Nov. 4—(m— ‘The supreme court today consented to pass on the appcsal of the North Dakota board of railroad commisston- ers attacking an injunction issued by three judges of federal court prohibit- iug putting into effect an order es- tablishing a scale of rates on certain classes of freight between points in North Dakota until the interstate commerce commission had acted in the matter. The Great Northern, Northern Pa- cific, Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie and Chicago, Milwaukce. St. Paul & Pacific railroads and the Farmers Grain & Shipping Co.. chal- lenges the new scale, contending the new rates gave undue and unlawful advantage to intrastate over inter- state shipments, and asking the in- torstate commerce commission to de- cide whether interstate commerce was being discriminated against unlaw- fully. ; The new rates were to take effect July 12, last. but the three judges of federal court suspended them pend- ing decision by the commission, stat- ing that should the rates become operative and the commission subse- quently set them aside, the railroads would be unable to recover. The court required the railroads to give bond of $150,000, to pay the ship- 's any difference between the old which were to continue in ef- fect, and any lower rates which the commission might approve. Sheep Exchange Firm | Opened in Dickinson Dickinson, N. D., Nov. 4.—Owing to! the demand evident in the recent ram exchange conducted here whereby over 140 rams were placed in flocks ef the district, the Stark County Wool Growers association has opened fn exchange office in Dickinson in charge of A. A. Dinsmore. i Registered Rambouillet, Hampshire | High Toppers and Dorset rams from j South Dakota and Montana flocks are being imported to supply the demand. Dickinson is cooperating to the full- strict, shown in the designation of Saturday, Nov. 9, as Lamb day. All meat markets are preparing to spe- cialize in lamb cuts, and all hotels and cafes will emphasize lamb on their menus that day. A splendid demonstration was given here this week, in connection with the farm cost conference, by P. F.; ‘Trowbridge of the state agricultural college, on the killing and preparation of lamb as a tasty and healthful food. It was the best attended mecting of the conference, and great interest was taken in the demonstration by local butchers, State Publishers at | Fargo in Annual Meet) Fergo, N. D., Nov. 4.—()—Publish- ers of North Dakota daily newspapers sathered here today in the semi-an- nual meeting of the states’ Associ- ated Press members and had before them ways and means of rendering improved service to newspaper read-| cvs of the state. H. H. Davies, pub- lisher of the Minot Daily News, is president of the organization. The publishers were. guests of t°~ Fargo Forum at @ noon luncheon. In! conference with the publishers src! G. T. McConville, St. Paul, in charge of the Northwest Service of the As- seciated Press, and Kenneth W. Sin- mons, Bismarck, state Associated Press correspondent. Wishek News Is Bought By Esther Billigmeier (Tritunie Special Service) Wishek, N. D., Nov. 4.—Miss Esther Billigmcier this week takes over duties ef the publisher of the Wishek News. ‘The newspaper was purehased by Miss Billigmeter from Robert Greiser, former publisher, Miss Billigmeier was associated with tac Napoleon Homestead for five years and the Emmons County Record hie last year. New England Woman ‘Very Seriously II? Dickinson, N. D., Nov. 4.—Mrs. M. J. Connolly, wife of the publisher of the Hettinger County Herald at New England and for years associate editor | pete in the national audition finals in THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1929 | ployed in the Fargo office of the Lahr {Additional Society‘ ey All members of the board of direc- tors of the Business and Professional ‘Women’s club are urged to be present for the board meeting tomorrow eve- ning at 7:30. The dinner meeting of the club will be held Tuesday eve- | ning, November 12. ee Ld i Eugene Fitzgerald, night sports edi- ; tor of the Fargo Forum, has returned | to Fargo after reporting the Bis- | marck-Fargo high school football | | von Luckner tell the remainder of his quest for Buffalo Bill. walked the ties to Denver, | i ” the door of the Cody domicile and | Fellx von Luckner. a NS Von Luckner Was Boy Tramp in U. S. . . Seeking Buffalo Bill lowed too closely on the announce- ment of his $1,000 wealth. Byt it was Onkel Fritz Baudissin. ;Onkel Fritz saw that Felix was taughi the etiquette with which an imperial naval lieutenant should present him- self to his parents and announce his identity. Armed with visiting cards Felix went home. The old valet did not recognize him. His father behind In fact, he | the door could be heard roaring. “Un- ‘apped on | Sinn! It can’. ve, “mere ts no The returning prodigal could hardly convince him. Pays Tribute to Mothers ‘Continued from page cone) (ally he sailed through the { Gate into San Francisco. It x Golden | | excruciatingly funny to hear | learned—that Buffalo Bill was in game for the championship of the | state here Saturda: ane street, will entertain the members of the Progressive Mothers club tomor- ; row evening. Papers will be given by | Mrs. Roy Riggs and Mrs. G. M. Frei- | tag. x * * | Miss Susan B. Sheaffer will be hos- | tess to the members of the Alumni association of the Bismarck hospital at S o'clock Thursday evening at the | P. B. W. club rooms. Hl ** The Mother's club will mect Tue: day afternoon at 3 o'clock with M: H. T. Perry, 116 Avenue B. Members will respond to roll call by naming a current book. x ek Miss Marian Upham left this morn- ing for Fargo where she will be em. Motor Sales company. Miss Upham has been with the company here for some time. xe * Members of the St. Alexius hospi- tal ajumni association will hold a meeting at 8 o'clock Tuesday evening at the St. Alexius hospital nurses’ home. Mrs. Marie Macklin Latson Eighty years old, and author of a} older, and the times move on to the new novel! That is the achievement | Present. a .|..Mrs. Latson was born Hannah of Mrs. Marie Macklin Latson of this | Marie Buckland at Eagle, in Wyoming city, who at an age when most women | county, New York, in 1849—80 years —and men, too—have retired to a! ago. Her father died in the Civil war, cozy chimney corner to enjoy a few! and it was a mournful little war or- quiet years of life, is still busy at her| phan who traveled to Hudson, Wis. typewriter, writing novels—and selling | where she lived with relatives. At the them. age of 16 years she began teaching George Bernard Shaw is 73 years | school. old and, writing in the quiet of his) “I alw had the ‘writers’ itch’,” English home, has recently produced the aged author said. “and jotted a new play. One thinks of Mr. Shaw | down incidents all along life’s pros- as a grand old man of Ictters. Perous paihway. But here in Bismarck a woman who “I have been twice happily married has lived far beyond her allotted span | and have four very prosperous citi- of years, on a frontier ferm. raising | zens to carry on the inherited energy children, and teaching school, has just | successiul pioneering produces. It i luced her sixth novel. jall pri nd commonplace and than any other form of amusement,” | my typewriter best.” - she says. Her new novel. “The Way-; Her books include “The Vale of side Waif.” the sixth she has pub- Teams,” “The Fatal Glass,” “The Mys- lished, is just off the presses of Rich- | tery-of the Marpletons,” “Painted in ard G. Badger, publisher at the Gor- | Dra and “The Sylvan Portal.” And, hem Press. It is a story that begins in| just to show how up-to-date is this Civil war days when the chief charac- | g0. old author with her busy ter is left at the home of a stranger, | type r, in each copy of her new his mother dead, his father on the} slip bearing the words, road with a circus. The child grows/“Adapted to screen dramatization.” peted in the state contest here. Be- sides the two victors, contestants were: ss Lovey Bernice Gransalka, contralto, Oakes; John R. McFarlane, Ellendale; Miss Merilla Hilstad, so- prano, and Karsten Egze, baritonc, Mayville; Miss Mary Murphy, so- prano, and Harold Reed, baritone, Jamestown; Ivan Harold Jones, bas- New York. Red 1 » Votes of listencrs-in counted 60|%0. Bismarck; Mabel Pearl Erickson, A 5 aiceh er cent | Minot; Marian E. Edwards, soprano, per cent and judges’ votes 40 per cent | MNO; Marian EE er toward final decisions in the state; 8nd Melvin Vettrus, Grand Forks; contest. Miss Trances Schafer, Hebron; and Miss Sandin sang “Ballatella” from | E*nest Gruer, Mandan. “Pagliacci,” written by Leoncavalla, Definite Gates for the district con- in Italian, and “Polonaise” from; {test at Chicago have not yet been “Mignin,” by Thomas, in French. Mr. | made. Johansson sang “Danny Boy” and “The Bandalera.” Miss Sandin, 18 years old and prob- ably the youngest who competed in the state contest, is a lyric soprano. She was graduated from Bismarck high school with the class of 1928.4 Accompanying her in the contest w: Miss Mabel Aaberg, pianist. Miss Sandin is a pupil of Madame Her- | thai dislodges irritating mucus with- man Scheffer, Bismarck teacher of j out effort, and clears up the dis- voice. tressing cough. Mrs. F. A. Gibson, M4 Singers Entered Racine, Wis. says: “Coughs never Fourteen singers, seven young wom- | last long in our family—Foley’s en and a like number of young men, | Honey and Tar puts a quick end to all winners in local auditions con- | coughing, and heals the sore scots. ducted throughout the state, com- | Our druggist recommended it.”—Adv. Miss Marian Sandin Wins First Place in N. D. Radio Audition (Continued from page one) RELIEF FROM DREADED COUGH- ING Hard coughs that strain and weak- en, resulting from colds and recurr- ing bronchial attacks, are very quick- ly eased and relieved by reliable Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, “I. still like the typewriter better pilgrimage is at an end, but I still like; zee Miss Clara Holen returned Satur- day from Seattle, Wash., where she spent the past two months as the guest of her aunt, Mrs. T. Nelson. * e The Current Events group of the B. T. W. club will meet at the club rooms ris evening at 7 o'clock, with Miss | Anna Burr as leader. | es * A meeting of the Four Leaf Clover ; club will be held Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Alfred Zuger, 501 West Thayer street. ze Mr. and Mrs. Jay A. Miller src spending several days in Fargo as the guests of Mr. Miller's parents, Mr. anu Mrs. Thomas Miller. s* * Mrs. Con Short and son Donald. of j Medora, were the guests of Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Bodenstab, 520 Mandan, over the week-end. *e * Gordon MacGregor, 413 Avenue B, spent the week-cnd with his father and mother, Dr. and Mrs. M. Mac- Gregor, in Fargo. e* Frank Richards, director of ath- letics in the Dickinson high school. was a Saturday visitor in the capital city. se & The Bismarck W. C. T.U_ will meet at 3 o'clock Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. J. J. Rue, 711 Avenue A. * * * Oliver C. Brannen, Bismarck ‘Trib- une proof reader, is ill at his | home from an attack of influenza. | ses & Mrs. J. C. Delzer has returned from New Leipzig where she spent a week at the home of her parents. *s Mrs. J. P. French, 617 Fourth street, is slightly ill in a local hospital. There is now one motor vehicle for every 21 of the population of Great Britain. of Thoxine le guaran- teed to relieve sore throat. Quicker. bet- ter and pieasanter than anything you have ever used or yourmoney back.36¢., oe. SLAU Here They They’re Lunatics! Screamingly funny! Happily Hi of that paper and a prominent club woman in the Slope country, is very seriously ill at the Dickinson hospital where she has been for some weeks. _Unknown Assailant Shoots Farmer Dead Independence, Mo., Nov. 4—()}— An unknown assailant invsde peaceful farm home near here last night and fired severa! cases Us buckshot through a kitchen 5 "ling Albert Weddle as he sat in his casy chair winding his watch, and }.. ably _iatally wounding his wife, Serre Easy! Quick! Glycerin Mix for Constipation your system. ueves GAS, scur headache. Let Adlerika give stomach una sowels a REAL cleaning and how good you feel! Lenhart Store.—Adv. In this first filmsical comedy. * tillating “When True”! Bing Balan! . Other Features: Paramount Sound News ‘The World's Four Funniest “The Carnival Man” Men! Paramount All-Talking Act Matinee Dally 2:30 » + + Evenings Tand 9 - - - Saturdays 5:30—7:00— 10 and 350 nd 50c And They’re Utterly Mad! o ‘The MARX Brothers men do their gay, bizarre fooling on the talking screen! and Mary Eaton. Irving Berlin’s lovely melody, Are! ilarious!| The Marx- With Ziegfeld’s scin- stars, Oscar Shaw Germany with his circus. Some years ilater when he rejoined his family he {even learned that the von Luckner Mrs. H. E. Stewart, 324 Fourteenth | days while exhibiting in Dresden. ; Many, earned $1,000 and entered the |excitement downstairs, came in. She {rushed over to him, said the couni ;and embraced and kissed him and there were no more doubts as to whom he was. From being a rapscallion Felix now | became the l.cro of the family. He family had entertained his hero two From Denver von Luckner went to New York mostly on the ties again, and washed dishes in a cheap cafe, then graduated to door knob polish- er at the Hotel Majestic. On this present lecture trip he went to the Majestic and had a happy reunion with—his doorknobs, Meets Uncle Fritz the Admiral Eventually he went back to Ger- | had come home a self-made man, This i ideal of self-man was also, along with | Buffalo Bill, the pas |life. He described his emotion |mingled with the Rockefellers, the Vanderbilts, the Stillmans and others of the New York aristocracy, self- made men who never passed an exam- ination-—as he polished doorknobs at hool | the Majestic I". But he described Navigation school under the name he Hed era sea, Ludeke. The sc! led to his lieutenancs Looking | ¥ . through a register of the German | hem re oui, nobility in a cafe, he found his name there annotated as dead, but with a ? to the notation. Whereupon he bawled. “Waiter, another beer. still alive.” Now a new surprise awaited him ned to a ship, the admiral de- sired his presence. He had some trouble convincing him he was von Luckner. Also that he had the neces sary financial equipment to support |the Lions couldn't avoid roaring with | delight. The count pa'' a great tribute to H€ | the war mothers. As an old sailor. T'm|he said, he could not bring himself to kill any of the men on the ships he sunk. All were taken off before bombs were placed. eestor Was French M “You know,” he said, is the mothers who suffer from war's hor- rors. And there is no difference be- the dignity of an imperial naval lieu- | tween an enemy's mother and your tenant. Proudly he slapped his | own. Pocket with the $1,000 in it | “Now.” he went on, “the war is The admiral rushed dver and em-' over. Let us forget its political rea- braced him. We all stand under the same “Ach, mein lieber Felix, Let us have a closer relation - jedoch dein Onkel Frit the ad-'ship. Let there be good feeling. As miral cried—“I am your Uncle Fritz.” for me TI “das a boy to love Von Luckner had some suspicion. ur country, That tie was never ich bin ¢ As We Grow Older We = frees on Watch IDNEY disorders are too serious to ignore. It pays to heed the carly signals. Scanty, burning or too frequent kidney excretions; a drowsy, listless feeling; lameness, stiffness and constant backache are timely warnings. To promote normal kidney action and assist your kidneys in cleansing your blood of poisonous wastes, use Doan's Pills. Used and recommended the world over. Sold by good dealers everywhere. 50,000 Users Endorse Doan’s: Mre. 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The acknowledgment fol- | broken by the war, it was too strong Then the old mother hearing the | a quaint humor that ; exchanges irregular: Demands: Great] Britain, 4.87 5-16; France, 383%; Italy, 5.2312; Germany 23.89; Norway; 26.7815; Sweden 26.84; Montreai 98.25, to be broken.” “I know the extent of your coun- | try,” he said in the coursé of his talk. ‘Only a tramp, who walks the ties, | xno how big it is.” | Incidentally the count announced |that his great-great-grandfather had | fought in the armies France and | jhad become Ma al Nikolaus yon Luckner. He was sent to the guil- lotise by Robespierre in 1794. The great national hymn of France, writ- ten by Roget de Lisle, the Ma | laise, was dedicated to the marecha by its author, i STANDARD OIL CLOSE. Standard + BAY Notice to Country Club mem- bers: The annual meeting has been postponed to Tuesday eve- ning, Nov. 19th. Signed by? Board of Directors, _————— EEE | Theatre Robber Given 4-30 Years in Prison | St. Paul, Nov. 4 Fran jtoehr, alias Starr. 23, was sentenci from four to 30 years in state prison today after he pleaded guilty to robbing the President theater of $700 last October 5. He was st need under the habitual criminal John Tetu, 24, | Was sentenced to jUnder the same victed of robbing an o was cons i] station of $60, can be checked in a day a 's Laxative BROMOQUININE has New York. Nov. 4 | Steady, 6 per cent s steady 30 da 4-6 months 6. Prime cc FOREIGN York, ll money s day. Tune 5 60-90 days 6; on the favorite family remedy for two generations, It is the rece ogni ndard remedy for colda, Refuse substitutes. At all druggists $0c. Grove’s Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets $$$ ees | | fuccesssul Since 1889 relal paper 6-614. CHANG : | New Nov. 4. 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