The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 8, 1929, Page 9

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RECEIVING CHARTERS AND ALSO INSTALLING: Week of Higher Degrees to Be, Marked by Big Banquet at Temple at 7:30 Installation of the new offictrs of Bismarck-Mandan consistory, in the blue lodge room of the temple, at 7:30 ; this evening, will climax a week of Scottish Rite Masonry here. The ceremony fs open to all blue lodge | Masons and their wives. Tt will follow the traditional ban- | quet to all Scottish Rite Masons, al 0 at the temple, over which Judge A. M. Christianson, master of Ka-j dosh, will preside. The officers of Bismarck Lodge of Perfection, of Missouri Slope chapter of Rose Croix and of Bismarck-Man- dan council, knights of Kadosh, also cre being installed today, but these installations are set for this after- noon. There was no morning session of the Rite. Today's program began with lunch- con at 12 o'clock. At 1:30 Walter R. ‘Reed. sovereign grand inspector general for North Dekota and « thir- hird degree Mason, made an ad cress in presentation of the charter to Bismarck Lodge of Perfection | and the consistory. He represented the Supreme council at Washington. Up to this time the various Scottish Rite bodies here have been operating under letters temporary issued last spring by the council. The plan today was to give a place on the program to Mary Smith, of Huff, a Mandan school girl, to read the essay on the constitution on which she won a $500 prize several years ago. Washington donors of th¢ prize had doubts at the time, of the genuineness of the essay and sent i vestigators to Morton county to as sure the givers of the money that; they had not been im) on. They met a barefooted girl driving the | cows home, which added considerably to their doubt, but when the facts all were laid before them by the girl's teacher, her parents and herself, with exhibit of the reference works con- sulted in preparation of the essay, doubts vanished and the girl was paid the prize money. As the thirty-first and thirty-sec- ond degrees of Masonry are constitu- tional degrees, Judge Christianson conceived the idea of having Miss) Smith appear on the program, time permitting, and read her essay. ‘tional security to the bootlegger, pro- ; Woman Postpones | H | Endurance Flight | —___—__—_+ Minneapolis, Nov. 8&—()—Failure to complete a training course to enable ie to in age 40 hours caused ona , St. Paul parachute jumper and flyer, to postpone an en- durance record attempt set for today. Miss Malloy was to have taken off this morning in a small cabin plane | in an attempt to beat the women's endurance solo flight record of 26! hours and 10 minutes. | Her training the past two weeks | has consisted of extending her hours of wakefulness and working at mo-) notonous tasks. She was not satisfied | with her progress, however, and post- poned her flight. IDEA ON PRORIBITION == Thinks Sheppard Proposal is a ‘Frank Confession Prohi- bition Has Failed’ Washington, Nov. 8.—(4)—Senator Harry Hawes, Democrat, Missouri. contends that friends of the proposed legisiation to make purchasers of liquor equally guilty with the seller, should ask that it be done by consti- tutional amendment through a fefer- endum. \ Al he terms the proposal, ad- vanced by Senator Sheppard, Demo- crat, Texas, co-author of the eigh- teenth amendment, “a frank confes- sion that prohibition under the pres- ent law has measureably failed.” These assertions were made in a radio address over the Columbia sys- tem last night under the auspices of the Evening Star. Senator Sheppard | spoke in defense of the suggested islation under similar arrangements a week ago. Hawes said such a referendum, which its proponents “could not con- sistently oppose * * ° might show some very strange results.” Under the proposal, he said, “We are now :sked to include many mil- Mons of cur people in a new criminal class, and to add to the power and immunity of the bootlegger by clos- ing the mouths of his cutomers under the threat of five years’ servitude in the penitentiary and a $10,000 fine for the purchase of beverage which contains more than one-half of one per cent of alcohol.” It would impede law enforcement, he asserted, and “it would give addi- vide a new field for the blackmailer, and create an enlarged ‘gangiand’ He said that “theft, arson and mur- ‘The Journal today said it had from reputable financial circles that the Insull Public Utilities interests of ‘SENATOR HAWES HAS si les | ex INSULL NEGOTIATES POR PURCHASING OF POSHAY PROPERTIES Report Public Utility Company Has Its Eye on Bankrupt Minneapolis Firm Minneapolis, Minn., Nov. 8.—(”— learned had started preliminary ne- gotiations for purchase of the W. B. ay company properties, Examinations of affairs here of the company. which went into re- ceivership last week, has been made by representatives of the Trsull inter- ests, the Journal said, adding that in- dications were reports of the preli inary investigations would be favor- able. The Journal understands the pro- jected deal would involve all or a ma- jJority of the properties owned by the Public Utilities Consolidated corpor- ation, a subsidiary of the Foshay company. Tt was considered unlikely, however. the Journal said, that any transaction involving iw completion of the inventory, work on which has been started by Joseph Chapman, receiver. sales of the properties ould reach the final stage until Valuation of the Foshay company properties. has been estimated to be in more. CHICAGO EXPRESSES DOUBT OVER PURCHASE the neighborhood of $20,000,000 or Chicago, Nov. 8.—(#)—Doubt was ‘at the office of the Insull Utilities interests today that negoti- ations were under way for the pur- chase of properties of the W. B. Fo- shay company, a: reported by the Minneapolis Journal. and other officers of the Middle West Utilities company were in Biloxi. Miss., today and had been out of the city since the Foshay company went into receivership. The Chicago office had learned of no negotiations with the Fosnay company. SMITH-HUGHES WORK Samuel Insull INCOME $281 7281 Fargo, N. D.. Nov. 8.—North Dako- | ly ! | | | i | | NATIONALISTS TRIUMPH 8——The i i f i ue i i i eF Fi i i! if i i ! | | : BZ i [CHICAGO RACKET IS | | Group Punished Opponents, Re- warded Customers, Col- lected Money | | i 1 | Chicago, Nov. 8—(#)—The govern- ment believed today it had uncovered & new racket under the name of the | South Side Business Men's Law and Order league. Among members arrest- ed by prohibition officers yesterday were William Payne, organizer; and ; Mrs. Lena Wichrowski, 60-ycar-old | purpose apparently : It served to punish those it opposed; it rewarded “customers”; and it col- lected money for law and order, “us- ing the money for the overthrow of law and order.” Anderson said the government was informed that the league sold alcohol and provided a degree of protection to its customers. To saloonkeepers who refused to buy alcohol from it, the league is alleged to have retorted with raids. An office was maintained at which subscriptions were received from persons interested in prohibition law enforcement. Payne, known as a professional re- former, called the arrest a frameup. “T've been fighting liquor and vice for 10 years,” he said. Mrs, Wichrowski was surprised at the charges and federal men were convinced she was made president as ® blind. She said she believed the league was all that its name implied, and told of having written many let- ters herself asking funds for the league’s work. : STEADY INCREASE IN LABOR ACCIDENTS Compensation Board Data Indi- cates Tendency Upward 80 Cases a Month Constant increase in the number of industrial accidents in North Dakota is shown by statistics of the state workmen's compensation bureau, ac- cording to data compiled by R. E. Weneel, bureau commissioner. During the first six months of the bureau's operation it received an av- erage of 80 claims a month. That ‘HLT NDE ne DR RITE —_——_—_______-+ | Smoking Coeds Are | | Banned by College - o—_ ~~ " City, N. D., Nov. &—Valley 2 Teachers college has no ‘ls who smoke. In an announcement at cliapel re- ‘cently, President C. E. Allen stated that while men are permitted to smoke, excep: on the campus, any girl student found smoking would be asked to leave the college. He explained that the school would not recoremend a girl who smoked and that she would merely be wasting her time by remaining in the institu- | ’ | HOTEL MANAGER 70 FACE GRAND JURY Will Be Asked to Tell of the] ‘Wall Street Booze Party’ Given by Banker Washington, Nov. 8.—(?}—Frank 8. Hight, manager of the New Willard | hotel, where the dinner referred to by Senator Brookhart as the “Wall Street booze party” took place in De- cember, 1926, has been requested by District Attorney Rover to appear Monday before the grand jury. Rover said he had requested Hight to bring with him all hotel records relating to the dinner about which Senator Brookhart, who attended, testified before the grand jury this week. Hight is the second person con- nected with the dinner, given by Wal- ter Fahy, New York broker for new members of the senate, who has been requested to testify before the grand jury. Edward E. Loomis, president of the Lehigh Valley railroad, was asked by Rover to appear Monday and has accepted the invitation. Senator Brookhart said on the floor of the © nate that he saw Loomis pour some “alcoholic stuff” from a flask and drink it. Otto Kahn, New York financier, was also present at the dinner but Rover has not indicated that he would be asked to testify. Arvold Will Address Minot College Alumni Fargo, N. D.. Nov. 8.—A. G. Arvold, head of the public speaking depart- ment of the North Dakota Agricul- tural college and naticnally known through his development of the Little Country theater project, will be the SUPERIOR ELEVATOR TO BE MADE LARGER |Great Northern Will Be Able to: Store 13,000,000 Bush- els of Grain St. Paul, Nov. ()— Plans for another addition to the Great North- | ern rails 's grain elevator at Su- perior Wis. were announced today by W. P. Kenney, vice president and di- rector of traffic. The annex will make the Superior elevator the largest ele- vator unit in the world. The addition will be a duplicate of one built last year. It will have a capacity of 3,000,000 bushels. The cost will be approximately $600,000. Material orders are now being placed, and actual construction will begin shortly after the first of the year, Mr. Kenney said. It will be com- pleted in time for the 1930 crop. The new addition will bring the | total capacity of the Superior clevator | bushels. A ‘The plant has an unloading capac- ity of 30 cars an hour, and can load the largest of the lake boats in three hours. The loading capacity is 100,000 bushels an hour. The new addition will be composed of 239 circular bins, each 110 feet high and nearly 14 feet in diameter. Each bin will have a capacity of approxi mately 12,500 bushels of grain. \ Turkey Methods Will | Be Demonstrated at | i Armour’s Tomorrow | The turkey killing, grading and | marketing demonstration which the | federal Agricultural department has conceded Bismarck out of the only four it is putting on this fall in the West, will be held at 10 a. m. and 1:30 a. m. Saturday. It will be staged at the Armour creamery and poultry station, 922 Front street. by Gordon W. Sprague, the department expert from Wash- ington. A talk on feeding for market also will be included in the demonstr tion. Housewives Classes Planned for Minot} Minot, N. D., Nov. 8.—1)—Classes to teach housewives how to do better work, now under way in Fargo, will open soon in Minot and in the spring at Grand Forks, Miss Ella Johnson | of the state agricultural college told 2 1 e.4 Lovely hair: Modern hair dressers add beauty a your hair by graceful lines and cot; | tours. It is just as important to ket _ your hair soft, lustrous, abundar rich in color. ‘ Millions of girls and women & « doing this at home with the easy he of Danderine. It is so simple to us All you do is put a little on you brush each time you arrange yor hair. Instantly Danderine brings out tl natural color of dingy, lifeless hai makes it more sparkling and lustrot than brilliantine; makes it easy manage; holds it in place. The consistent use of Danderi: "7 dissolves the crust of dandruff; sto; @% falling hair; tends to make the ha w long. silky and abundant. Fi million bottles used a year! Danderine‘ Thee Minute Hai mati University Seniors to | Create Student Fun: Grand Forks, N. D.. Members of the senior cl University of North Dakota noon, created a $500 fund. The fund will from the profits of the yearbook published by surpluses in the class dt and last. Harriet Dobbie. acting president of the class, ed at the meeting. R. H. Forman. managing editor of the book, submitted a financial report + the class. the home economics section of the state education association conven- tion here today. | Courses include meal preparation | and serving, clothing construction, child training and home furnishings. They are held once cach week for .. ° .. {der are inherently wrong and wicked | University Engineers | under every cumaeanes ind “mor= H ally wrong in the absence of all law. Build Big Photostat | Sty ther -the purchase of liquor is ican iniebies ati aati think legally wrong only whcn made so” by photostat machine which will make ta has realized $281,072.87 net income from project work under the guid- ance of Smith-Hughes vocational agricultural education during the last three years, according to figures re- leased by L. L. Scranton. assistant professor of vocational agriculture at main speaker at a gathering of A. C. alumni and former students in Minot ‘Thursday, Nov. 7, during the North Dakota Educational association con- vention. ‘Aside from the large number of agricultural college alumni and for- was in 1919. In 1920 the claims aver- aged 120 per month. ‘Binee then the tendency has been steadily upward, the peak being reached in October, 1929, when $74 claims were received. For the first 10 months of this year the average) today, voting. as @ final act, to pre pare for another congress in probably in Chicago. A preparat committee for permanent organisi’ the nation’s statutes. “We cannot a bigger enlargement than any sim- desma gremlin radial ye ilar machine now on the market has been constructed by three students of the College of Engineering, at the University of North Dakota. This machine makes copies of il- lustrations, printed pages, diagrams, or other work directly from the ori- rinal without the aid of intermediate processes. It makes copies for cn-/ largements up to 24 by 28 inches while the largest machine now on the market makes only 18 by 24 inch en- Jargements. _ The actual construction of the ma- chine was done by Arthur Miller, To!- ley; Willlam MeSparrcn, Grandin; Kenneth Nygaard, Washburn; end) Virgil Knight, Grand Forks. George | Charrier, Langdon has charge of the | photostad work. \ University professors who aided in the construction of the ray 8 om Libby, prof i Chandier, dean of the college of en- gineering; Charles Ellis, professor of architectural engineering; Hywel C. Rowland of the music department; A. D. Keator, former University of North Dakota librarian; «A. 8. Wise- man, 3 E. W. Bollinger, assistant professor of industrial arts; and Alfred Boyd, professor of civil engineering. ry 11 Honor Seniors at U from A E 7 : i a i el > 5s fi 1] i it it Hl i i 5 i : 5 g 5 BAe Filal jinson Norm2! school, to Minneapolis i i | - o mandment, ‘Thou shalt. not yurchase liquor,’ ha. the solemnity, the sanc- tity or the authority of the Biblican commendment, ‘Thou shalt not kill.’ Common sense will prevail.” Harry Wienbergen to Represent Dickinson | Lions at Convention) Dickinson, N. D.. Nov. 8—The Dick- inson Lions club is sending Harry ‘Wienbergen, athletic director at Dick- | as its delegate to the convention of Lions there November 15. Quite a delegation of J.!ons will at-) tend the zone mecting at Bismarck | i hetc, provided i i £ ff | I 7 g i & i ik fy He 3 i t I geS5ge i iducted in 30 chools during this period and the net income to each amounted to $3,192.15 or an average return of $3.52 for every di ested by the community. .| Hughes high school have done actual farm projects un- der the guidance of instructors totals $201,246, or an average for each stu- dents of nearly $180 cational a state number close to 1,100 and there are 44 departments in high schools over the state having this type Of) nevis Lake, N. D.. Nov. &—— i EF the North Dakota Agricultural col- lege, in the form of charts which will be a part of the North Dakota exhibit 1 at the fourth annual concress of Vo- cational Kansas City Nov. 16-22. Asricultural Students in Smith-Hughes work has been con- North Dakota high community jollar in- ‘Under the Smith-Hughes plan the federal government pays ont-half of the vocational agriculture instructor's salaries and the pays the other half. In this manner, during this period, $79.826. eral funds were Huzhes Instructors in the state. local community 87 of fed- paid to Smith- ‘The-net income of all of the Smith- students who each year. ‘At present. says Mr. Scranton, vo- ral students in the 40 Drawn for Jury Service e in McLean (Teibune Special Service) Washburn, N. D., Nov. &—Forty jurors have been drawn for service during the regular term McLean county of district court here, m. Nov. 19. E g E i ier Ha | 5 ‘ : i al t : i f i tf i I i i if init | 3 é i E Ai i i t i ie 325 fe i i : i —-- ‘Seek Plane Wreckage Reported in Arkansas Helena, Ark., Nov. 8—()—An air- jPlane was pressed into service today to aid searching in their ef- which ‘several persons {saw falling in flames several from here lete yesterday. At least five persons said they saw the plane dive. None of the persons who saw plane fall was near enough to dis- tinguish the size or model. Garske Bank Bandits Get 47 Years in Cell Jimmy Russell, 24, was sentenced to 17% years in z and Nicholas Schneider, 33, and Louls Vivier, 22, received 15 years each when they pleaded guilty in district court to charges of robbing the bank ‘at Garske, Oct. 7, obtained $11,500. i 8 7 ii af fis a i I L i a : ef its i is 28: i 2 3 ft st 7 parties 1928 forts to locate the wreckage of a plane | reported they number of claims per month has been 458, compared to the previous high average mark of 401 per month estab- ished in 1928. Data covering the subject follows: Covered Claims Average Period Total per month 6 months 484 80 12 months 12 months 12months 12 months 12 months 12months 12 months 123 i i average next three years 194 Monthly average next three years 352 Monthly average ten months of ‘Albino’ Corn Found By Valley City Prof Valley City, N. D., Nov. 8.—Discov: of an “albino” or white corn seed ie Thompson, principal mer students residing in the Minot area, the educational meeting will bring many A. C. people in the teach- ing profession to that city for this) reunion, M. E. Tindall, alumni sec- retary, pointed out. fore than 50 are expected to attend the banquet. Building Permits for Minot Total $100,000 Minot. N. D., Nov. 8.—Building per- {mits for October as issued by the Minot city commission approached 338 { the $100,000 mark, thus bringing the j total for the first 10 months of the year to $1,752,370, according to ficures ‘reported by W. W. Peterson, city cn- gineer and building inspect New construction Pees 130. Remodeling permits were $8,825 in the aggregate, thus bringing Oc- tober’s total to $94,975. Fargo Robber Facing 10 to 80 Years in Jail St. Paul, Nov. a highway robbery charge in county , Louis McNevin, 26, who Nevin. County authorities announced they would file a charge of previous con- viction against him thus doubling the ordinary sentence of five to 40 years for highway robbery. McNevin was sentenced to the state reformatory from Graceville, Minn., on a robbery charge in 1921. No time was fixed for sentencing him. Students Who Study At Home Benefited Minot, N. D., Nov. 8.—(#)—Children who do home work get more benefit than comes to them from the mere learning of something new, Lloyd G. of the Mandan school, today told high school Use PAZO Try it for tor. 1 permits for the | | month recently ended reached eight weeks. At Fargo they were held at five different school build- ings so as to make them readily ac- cessible to all women. Miss Johnson said the job of help- ing the women who actually are | working as homemakers is one of the biggest confronting teachers of home economics. RITES SET FOR PIONEER Grafton, N. D., Nov. 8.—(?)—Final | rites for Mrs. Sevért Thompson, 62. a | resident of Walsh county since 1836. | will be conducted at the Norwegian Lutheran church this afternoon. NEW PASTOR ARRIVES Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 8—(?)— Rev. F. I. Schmidt, newly appointed pastor of the United Lutheran church, arrived here Thursday and will preach his first sermon Sunday. MARJORIE CELRICHS ON AIR New York, Nov. 8—()—Miss Mar- jorie Oelrichs, wealthy and socially nt, is to tell of styles over the radio. Her first address will be next Tuesday at 11:30 a. m. over the Co- lumbia broadcasting system network. 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