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} » “M ; yu i a Ss « > | \ ry v )AWES ARRIVES FOR HOOVER CONFERENCE | Declines to Comment on Report | He Will Submit to Hoo- of ver and Stimson Washington, Nov. 5.—(P}—Accom- | panied as usual by his underslung pipe and apparently in the best of humor, Charles G. Dawes, one time vice president and now ambassador to Great Britain, arrived here today for | conferences with Pres. Hoover on the forthcoming naval armament confer- ence in London. With the ambassador when he was | met at the station by a white house | automobile were ‘his wife and their! daughter, Mrs. Carolyn Ericson. They | went immediately to the executive | mansion for breakfast with the presi- dent and Mrs. Hoover. ‘The ambassador and his chief talk- | td but a short time and then the; president went to his desk in the oxecutive offices and Dawes went to the statg department to confer with Seeretary Stimson. Newspaper photographers were waiting for him on the state department steps. Mr. Dawes consented to pose but nsisted that newspaper correspond- snts who were an attending delega- ion be in the picture. He deciined, however, to comment dn the report he would submit to che president and the secretary of state and parried requests for a con- ference by saying that he was an am- aassador and had “to report to his wo chiefs.” Mr. Dawes’ plans for the day in- sluded luncheon at the white house and a trip to the capitol to see old friends and acquaintances in the sen- ate. A. OFC. PREPARING TO PICK DIRECTOR Blanks for Citing Nominations for Five Directors Are : Going Out — Association of Commerce primary for the nomination of ten candidates for director. primary closes at 3 clock. y afternoon, November ‘he election is to be held Friday, November 22. Each member in voting his primary ticket nominates only five candidates for director. The election committee | then places the ten highest nominees ‘on the ticket for the final clection. Five new directors will be elected out of ten nominces. Five of the present directors remain in office. [____laly’sKingtovisitPope __|[EYEXOF NATIONON Ballots are being sent out for the) © JOHN RASKOB DENIES PLUNGING ON MARKET: | ignpor ‘ant pe: He w the 38t! Washington, No 6.—(Py—In reply | to the charges of Senator Revinson. | lican, Indiana, Chairmen John b of the Democratic national | committee, vigorously denies he is a “stock market plunger. | “The answer ts that I do not) gamble on the stock market,” he said in a letter read in the senate late yes: terday by Harrison, Democrat, Mis sippi. “I have always purchase ‘stocks outright, investing in the se- curities I thought had an attractive future and have held the st Tiney are W. S. Ayers, Fred Peterson, John Hoffman, H. J, Duemeland, and T. P. Allen. The retiring directors are J. C. Taylor, Dale Simon, F. L. Conklin, R. B. Webb, and L. H. Rich- mond. They are not eligible for nom- ination and election again at this time. Jungman Urges State To Make Acquaintance Of Winter Fresh Air Make a friend of winter. Don't push up the thermometer to an un- healthful degree, complain about the frigid weather, and yearn for spring. That 1s the advice given today by Dr. J. D. Jungman, epidemiologist of the state health department, to North Dakota residents. “One should daily make a real friend of winter time by way of a long walk or other exercise in the fresh air. The cold northern blasts and the dry, crisp atmosphere are literally laden with pep but they will not come into one’s house and extend their advantages at the fireside,” the doctor says. “One must go out and meet them.” Thirteen cases of communicable diseases were reported from Bismarck to the state department during Oc- tober, according to Dr. Jungman’s monthly report, but not one case from Burleigh county, outside of Bis- marek, was recorded. Riga! reported from the Capital City 1; pneumonia 2; poliomyelitis 1; scar- let fever 2; trachoma 1; tuberculosis 1; typhoid fever 1; Vincent's angina 2. Cases of communicable je diseases throughout the state for the 30-day period follow: Chickenpox 90; diph- theria 29; erysipelas 2; influenza 2; measles 27; meningitis 9; scabies 23 1; were: Diphtheria 1; meningitis ; til such time as I felt they ling for all they were worth. t | In commenting on the recent de-; jeline of security prices on the New {York stock exchange, Robinson de- \clared Raskob partially responsible ‘through over optimistic statements as to the future of business and accused | }him of having advised wage earners) and low salaried workers to speculate in the market. All this, Raskob vehemently denied. His letter included a lengthy resume of interviews with him and state- ments issued by him over the last several years. Duluth Man Counsel Of Bank Corporation; Minneapolis, Nov. 5.—(7)—A. Me C. Washburn, Duluth, Minn., today was) appointed vice president and general counsel of the First Bank Stock Cor- | of the First National bank, which, with the First Minneapolis Trust company, is the holding company of the First Bank stock. | Mr. Washburn will succeed Judge G. W. Buffington, who has resigned on account of ill health, Mr. Wake- field announced. The change will become effective soon after the first of the year. Washburn also will be elected a mem- ber of the boards of the holding com- pany, Mr. Wakefield said. Judge, Buffington plans to leave for Cali-| fornia early in January for a rest.| He will remain on the board of direc- | Army to Help Handle Xmas Mail Delivery ‘Washington, Nov. 5—(#)—The army ML AL 1 FOUR NATURALS 272. Watch Friday's Paper Schrader’ to count it as they must remain at their posis until 6 p. m. But Schrader took his time about) He approached the polls) . peered in and walked, away without saying a word, which was a break for the newspaper pho- tographers who were not on the job Schrader then sent word ictures and { voting. | about 9 o'c THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1929 The first visit of King Victor Emmanuel of Italy (left) to Pope Pius at the Vatican, long awaited since the signing of the Lateran treaty last February, is expected to take place ab: t December 5. \ Lone Voter Keeps ameramen Pars) KIS 4 MEXIGA a F was election di vote. would pose for vote late in the afternoon. ; All Trains Stop for Funeral of President) sunday was made known today by Poilce, who said the total loss from , Cambridge, Mass., Nov. ery train on the 2,200 miles of the | Boston & Maine railroad was stopped for a minute at 11 a.m. today as fu- 1 vere being held here for neral services wel Rasen ‘of the| the library where the architect kepi | George Hannauer, VIRGINIA ELECTION Crucial Test for Democratic Or- ganization Faced in the Old Dominion i | | (By The Associated Press) | While election contests drew the) voters of a doven states to the polls, jtoday, the eyes of the nation were fixed primarily upon the gubernator- ial election in Virginia, watchful for | any indication of what might be ex- | pected of the old dominion in future | national campaigns. | Mayorality elections in New York, | Boston, and other citics attracted at- | ‘tention, but today’s balloting in Vir- | iginia was @ crucial test | |for the Democratic organization! ‘there. j {With a coalition candidate, William | {Moseley Brown, sponsored by the Re- | publicans and those elements of the | British Air Chief Flies on R-101 n in today's election. the lone voter registered in rict of the 10th) assembly cistrict of Manhattan. Four election board members and a | Policeman were appointed to receive ‘They have all day! Democratic party which supported didate of the rey Democratic ma- jehine, John Garland Pollard, it was inevitable that the results of the bal- {loting should be compared with the Hoover majority of 25,000, and inter- preted as indicating that Virginia had definitely joined the column of “doubtful” states or had returned to the “solid” Democratic south. In New York City, Mayor James J. by Representative Fiorello H. LaGuar- dia, Republican, Norman Thomas. socialist, and Richard E. Enright. for- mer police commissioner, running un- der the sponsorship of the Square Deal party. contest there were mayoralty elec- tions in cities of Michigan, Indiana. Kansas, and Ohio. State - wide elec- and Pennsylvania. * MAIL PLANE CRASH quite an Toluca, Mexico, Nov. 5.-(#)-Bodies of four men were here today awaiting pio, governor of the state of Agua- \sealientes: De Valera, his secretai John Carmichael, pilot of the plane, and Robert G. Lowry, 40, traffic su- perintendent of the airline, the Cor- Aeronautica de Transportes. formerly of Fort Worth, Texas. Vandal-Robber Loots Chicago, Nov. 5.—(#)—-The Vandi robbery of the Lake Forest home oi Edward H. Bennett, architect, 5. —| theft and damage was $25,000. destroyed and clothing was slashed and cut. The Vandal strode through railroad, who died Saturday at New iis favorite pieces of China, shatter- Haven. He was taken ill while attend-| ‘ng them with @ poker. Se the Yale-Dartmouth football| T@nging in value The services were held in the! Were broken as were several plates ing game. chapel of Mount Auburn cemetery, | ®” ven Vases from $150 to $3,500 id bowls, with President Ernest Martin Hopkins of Dartmouth delivering the culogy of Massachu- isetts and New Hampshire among the and the governors mourners. The bedy was placed in : grave |near the final resting place of Longe poration by L. E. Wakefield, president. fellow, Lowell and Henry Cabot Lodge. EMBDEN BANK CLOSES Closing of the Embden State bank of Embden, Cass county, nounced today by the state banking | Anti (department. The bank was capital- Safe and Sane Fourth years old. was an- ized at,$10,000, had a reserve of $6,000 | the and deposits of $62,000. Depleted re- ——$__— serve and frozen assets caused the| Thirty thousand cubic feet of air closing. its ons Coca potion ants lie. mn ne little things. com} pleasant breath. tion often leads to It He polgone He d bos Bobs men of thelr ¥ allowed to contin Cp ayer weighs approximately one ton. ‘DONT TRIFLE WITH CONSTIPATION Rid Your System of Its Disease-causing Poisons With ALL-BRAN Un- President Hoover, opposing the can- | regular Walker's candidacy for reelection on ; the Democratic ticket. was opposed | In addition to this and the Boston ; beep also were on in Ohio, Iilinois, | \ | Home at Lake Forest on Not only were jewels and bonds stolen, but valuable Chinsse ware wa; | Pioneer Dies in East! New York, Nov. 5.—(7)—Mrs. Julia Barnett Rice, one of the pioneers in the movement for a safe and sane Fourth of July, died at her home at last night. She was 69 She also was the founder of the Noise Society of America and | | Great Britain’s highest aviation of- \ficial, Lord Thomson, air minister, {Was a passenger aboard his country's |—and the world’s—largest airship, the |new dirigible R-101, on its official test flight. He is pictured above as he en- HOME IS DEDICATED \Gold Coast and Ghetto Hears ‘Aida’ Sung in $20,000,- 000 Music Palace . Mov. S—UP—Gold const | and ghetto sat last nigh: in ® $20, 000.000 tome of m rising sheer fvo:n the banks of the Chicago river nd heard Verdi's “Aida” dedicate the | skysckaper theatre to music's most showy form—grand opera. | The ghetto is larger than the gold coast, and it likes its Verdi and its: ° but it was the gold coast that he opening night in overwhelm- ing numbers and brilliance. A critic spoke of last night's open- ing as “the most important event enacted thus far in the art history of Chicago.” One morning paper devoted four pages of pictures and stories to detail the affair, and another gave the event two pages. The principals in last night's per- formance were Rosa Raisa, Charles Marshall, Cesare Formichi, Hilda Burke, Cyrena Van Gordon, Virgilio Lazzari and Charles Baromeo, with Giorgio Polacco directing. There were 3,471 in attendance at “Aida,” but there were 10,000 others outside, providing a traffic problem tered the giant craft through a door- ;way in the prow after ascending to |the top of the dirigible high mooring tower at Cardington, England. Tom Mix Indicted for Fraudulent Tax Note | Los Angeles, Nov. 5—(7)—Tom Mix, film cowboy, must go to trial in fed- ‘eral court, February 18 to defend the government of more than $100,000 in connection with preparation of his income tax returns for 1925, 1926 and 1927. Mix yesterday entered pleas of not guilty to an indictment charging him {with making false returns to evade payment of taxes and was ordered to | trial by Federal Judge William James. | | DIVORCEE PAYS ALIMONY | Milwaukee, Nov. 5.—(P)—Mrs. Re- becca Finkler must pay her husband claimants after crash of the Mexico $10 a week alimony. He testified she pleasant! Juarez mail plane early yester-|nazeed till he placed all his property! For cons ta her name. He is secking a divorce. handle. POLISH SEJM ADJOURNED Warsaw, Nov. 5.—(?)— The Polish sejm was adjourned by presidential decree for 30 days today when it met to convene after a recess since last Thursday at which time Marshal Pilsudski appeared with more than 100 army officers to open its initial session. MacDONALD, KING TALK held_a long interview with Premier MacDonald today following a morn- ing meeting of the privy council at Buckingham palace. ¥RILIOUS? Take MATURE'S REMEDY —-WR— tonight. You'll be “fit and fine” by morning— tongue clear, headache gone, appetite back, bowels acting bilious attack forgotten. tion, too, Better than ny mere laxative. At deuggists—cnly 25. Make che test tonight Got a cold? (Siac use r vrneoq treatment and : by tomorrow 4 , you'll fcel much. | ~ better. A little useit. Your druggist has it. \ latest scientific Corn Show discovery Crowds onight give yourself a Mistol | | Mistol opensup reece | Le Barron Seen Insure Mistol with you It and stop all H colds. Doctors Phone 876-M Bismarck, NN. v. Conventions COLLISIONS How about your cuto? Let lo | | that police had all they could do to’ department's order as having enjoyed | himself against charges of defrauding! London, Nov. 5.—)—King Georee | ; here and recommending fi this office to their friends. ing’s Visit With Pop Is Planned by Enve Pisa, Italy, Nov. C Devecchi, Italian ambassador to tl Holy See, arrived todsy snd pros ed to the palace at San Rossore. Dog's Bite May Be ||" Factor in Election d Buffalo, N. ¥., Nov. 5.—(4#)—Because a chow dog belonging to her father, Mayor Frank X. Schwab, bit her child, fe Ibert, o Gunther is supporting his rival at the election today. wi inderstood od: Two years ago, while the Gunthers pie . Ne Se canaiae were visiting at the mayor's home, the dog attacked the child. The Gunthers wanted the dog killed, but the mayor, after having the animal examined by % veterinary, refused. A rift between the two families resulted. ing’ will be celebrated at the embassy the Vatican by a gala official dit at which diplomats accredited to Vatican as well as to the Mr. Gunther aided in the campaign | |; of Mayor Schwab's opponent, Charles | Wil! meet for the first time E. Roesch, and Mrs. Gunther, eldest << daughter of the mayor, also appeared at Roesch rallies. Statements on the tamily row were issued by both fam- ilies, and the controversy became the feature of the closing hours of the campaign. Revolution Insurance Policies Are Revoked THEATRE Mexico City, Nov. 5.—(7)—The de- partment of industry, commerce and Tonight and Wednesday labor today revoked permission of in- surance companies to issue policies to cover damage sustained fn revolution, coup d'etat, or strikes, on the ground Y that insurance agents spread alarm- ing rumors in order to sell policies and which resulted to Mexico's detri- “BROADWAY { SC ‘AND, 99 / ment abroad. Eleven foreign insur- All Talking ance companies were named in the Music - S this privilege which was granted first | Sally O'Neil in 1927. tS —— jack Fegan Carmel Meyers | and dancing en- SCOTTS semble of beautifal EMULSION girls. yA FOOD TONI( All-Talking TAKE IT ALL WINTER Comedy “Fancy That” Service Is its own REWARD Pleasure gained by serving all clients alike, as courte- ously and completely as possible, rewards this agency adequately for the effort required. Keen en- joyment results from a ay’s duty well done. 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