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2° Te WARLAUNGHIG SEAT OP UNVERSTY orth Dakota School Accused of Horrible Cruelties in the Name of Medical Science Grand Forks, N. D., Feb. 17.—Con- Bolic of all the forces in North ‘Dakot tation pon live animals and living human ings, except ipon adult humans pable of giving their intelligent nsent who offer themselves for such Ing for the abolition of this method of research, which they contend is as dangerous and useless as it is admit- tedly cruel. Backed by Yperge Body Anti-Vivisection whose headquarters are in Chicago, at the instance of Mrs. Hilma A. Hunter, of this city, who has been earrying on a single-handed fight against vivisec- tion in North Dakota for years. “North Dakota has long been a the experiments carried on at the University of North Dakota here are so horrible that a mere description of them makes the blood run cold. No dog is safe on the streets of Grand Forks. It may be snatched at any moment and subjected to tortures that beggar all description. “We intend to see that the citizens of North Dakota—the taxpayers who support these animal experimentation laboratories at the University of North Dakota—are kept informed about the unspeakable things that are being done in the name of science. Noted Behind Move “The purposes of anti-vivisection societies are so frequently misunder- stood that it seems timely at this time to explain why this society is being organized and whom we intend to fight. Contrary to general belief, our battle is not with the average physician, a m:.jority of whom are conscientious and sincere men, doing their duty as they. see it. A small minority, however, which the ma- jority of whom are conscientious and sincere men, doing their duty as they see it. .’. small minority, however, which the majority is forced to sup- port and defend, is seriously reterd- ing the progress of medical science by its refusal.to drop an archaic and useless practice in favor of something more modern and humane. It is that minority we are determined to expose and suppress. “Some of the greatest scientists in the world have declared time and time again that. vivisection leads to false conclusions; that it. is out of date and utterly useless;. that the cruelty it entails to millions of help- Jess animals is out of all proportion to whatever small value it may have had at onetime, and that the medical profession would be on @ saner and more -efficient pathe if it dropped vivisection and turned to clinical re- search.” Among the national and interna- tional famous Utes wee will stand sponsor for the new society are George Arliss, world famous dramatic actor, whose recent motion picture, “Disraeli,” shown in film in Bismarck, was the season's outstanding success; Mrs, Irene Castle McLaughlin, former dancer and noted animal champion; Percival P. Baxter, former governor of Maine; and Edmund Vance Cooke, Cleveland poet, whose immortal “Rags” is conceded to be the finest tribute ever paid to a dog. BOTTINEAU MAY GET Every Indication Bill Will Pass Congress. Giving North Da-: kota Tree Appropriation Bottineau, N. D., Feb. 17,—()— Confidence that an appropriation for federal eeype cts 5 po oa = ta will approved by 3 contained in a letter received here from Pennie Cares P. Nye by =. E. Cobb, state er. In another letter received by Cobb, one of the assistants in the forestry ‘office at Washington said passage of the ition by congress seems Farmers Union Heads Plan Simmer’s Work i, age era Jamestown, N. D, Feb. 17~p— Members of the board of directors oF the Farmers’ Union were meeting here today to outline thelr activities for pede to deal principally with ce ganigation work. five board of the organisation, eld’ ive ida meeting. Those present. today were: C..C. Talbott, Jamestown, president; Wal- ter Maddock, Plaza, vice president; H. G. Knobel, Buchanan, treasurer; E. E. Green, secretary; and members Dan O'Connor, New Rockford; C. W. Fine, Sheyenne, and D. H. Hamilton, = CORNERLEN FENCE ABSORBS BIG FARM MANAGERS’ PARLEY ister Chiefs Operating Big Tracts in Minnesota, Dakotas and Canada Meet at Fargo Fargo, N. D., Feb. 17.—()—Manag- ers of 2,500,000 acres of land in the United States, Canada and South America will be represented at the annual winter meeting of the North- west Farm - Managers , which will convene here February 18 for a three-day session. A Canadian group will represent the management of 1,000,000 acres in the dominion and representatives are expected from a large number of states, although most of the mem- bers are from the Dakotas and Min- nesota. Explanation of new methods of do+ BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1930 MONTANA DAKOTA CO. TO SPEND $1,000,000 ONLINE TO WILLISTON Will Pipe Yatural Gas From Montana Field to Produce Power and Supply Fuel 7 Plans and specifications for the $1,000,000 pipeline to be built from Glendive to Williston by the Mon- tana-Dakota Power company have ‘been completed and inquiries are now out for quotations on the necessary pipe and other material according to ‘an announcement by the Glendive of- fice of the company. It is expected that deliveries on the pipe will start early in March, so that the distribu- tion of pipe can be completed before the frost leaves the ground in the The time required to lay the miles of main line from Glendive to Williston should not exceed 120 days and it is expected that gas service will be available to customers in all towns along the line, including Williston, not later than September 1. The route of the line will be ‘hrough Sav- age, Sidney and Fairview, making service available in those three towns as well as Williston and also the farms along the route of the line. The power company hopes to com- plete arrangements with the Holl, Sugar company of Sidney for the use of gas in its plant this fall. ‘The company also contemplates the construction of a compresser station Auto Caroms Against Street Killing 1 Chicago, Feb. 17.—()—Mri. Kath- erine Von Oepen, 45, was killed and her 21, was cut when 10 DEAD FROM COLD IN EASTERN STATES Intense Suffering Increases as Thermometers Register 40 Degrees Below Zero New York, Feb. 17.—()}—Snow and biting temperatures that sank as low snow drifted six feet deep at Portsmouth, N. H., and at Cape Cod the drifts held snowplows and auto- mobiles helpless while a severe gale delayed transatlantic and coastwise on the gas field approximately 40| shipping. miles- south of Glendive, where the pressure on the gas going into the pipe line will be built up sufficiently to deliver gas in sufficient quantities at Williston. ‘The Montana-Dakota Power com- . pany is starting construction of a new A large number of women are ex- Pected to attend and a committee of women will have charge of the menus served to visitors at the local hotel which will be their headquarters as well as the menu to be served at the ‘annual banquet, Wednesday night. Members of & local committee on Crabbe and J. H. Shepperd. Mrs. Carrie Gowland will have charge of the women’s committee. Frank W. Reinoehl, Larimore, pres- ident of the association, will open the business session Tuesday: . One of the main problems for consid- eration at the opening session will be that of dividing between tenant and owner the cost of combining grain. Waiter Reed, Fargo, will lead the dis- cugsion. feature of the noon lunch will be songs by the. farm choir with H. L. Chaffee as let and W. A. Cleveland as pianist. T. O. F. Herzer, Winnipeg, Man., will discuss land classification at the lunch hour. Livestock Big Topic At the afternoon session, F. Paul Smith, Amenia, will discuss farm cost accounting and William Guy, Amenia, will talk, on various phases of the sheep industry. An effort will be made to ascertain the correct num- | Dr. ber of ewes for a half-section farm. US. FORESTATION = 3rd, 5th Regiments Of Field Artillery Will Be Abandoned WHOOPING Cou Fargo, N. D., Feb. 17. power plant at Williston which should be completed by the time that the gas | 0f 10,000 registered a temperature | (9, Northfield, Vt., which had a tem- perature of 6 below last night, en- countered a further drop of 12 de- grees this morning before the mercury began to ascend. Portland, Me., reg- istered 4 below; Greenville, mate SCHOOL AT WAKPALA FOR INDIAN CHILDREN WILL GRADUATE TWO Are First to Finish High | School Courses Mobridge, 8. D., Feb. 17.—St. Eliza- beth’s Mission, on the Standing Rock reservation near Wakpala, is unique in that up until this year it has been the only :credited Indian school in the United States. In the last year the government hr - established others. The Mission is a boarding school for the Indian boys and girls of the res- crvation interested in the. Episcopal church, This sci.ool is‘in its sixth year of local cooperation with public schools, There are 50 children residing at the school all of whom attend-the Wak- pala public school, with the excep- tion of those of the depart- ment, who gre taught at the Mission by an accredited teacher. Misses Isabel Shields and Verna Holmes, two girls of the Mission, ex- Pect to graduate this spring from the Wakpala high school, being the first to graduate under the new cooper- ative policy. Built in 1885 In 1885 the fist church at St. Elizabeth's with with a rectory at- tached was built on Oak creek, this building being the gift of Mrs. John Jacob Astor, and coming through the efforts of Rev. Mr. Swift, then in charge of the Cheyenne Mission. In 1892 Philip Deloria, a native deacon, who was related to some of the Standing Rock families and was in residence at St. Elizabeth's, was ad- vanced to the priesthood and placed in charge of the Standing Rock work. From that time on, this work has been independent of any other reser- vation, In 1890, St. Elizabeth's school for boys and girls was established with New York city, where snow removal wor! for 8,662 unemployed men in addition to the regular force , | this morning of 7 above zero. GROUNDED SHIP'S all the towns in the vicinity of debe ton. With power being generated al Williston in large quantities, together with power from the Kincaid plant in the north and from the Glendive plant in the south, there should be no shortage of power and few interrup- tions in service. NEW YORK MINISTER SCORES PROHIBITION ‘Dr. Randolph Ray, Rector of Little Church Around Cor- ner, Gives View: New York, ane E eee Randolph , Protest E: copal, rector of the church of the figuration, popularly known as PASSENGERS SAVED Admiral Benson, en Route to Portland, Goes Ashore Saturday Night Fort Canby, Wash., Feb. 17.—(?)— With removal of another boatload of passengers from the Admiral Benson at 9:05 a. m. today, it was believed all the passengers had been taken from the Pacific Steamship com- pany’s coastal liner aground off the mouth of the Columbia river. The ship went aground Saturday night. Thirty-four passengers were taken ashore yesterday by lifeboats and a breeches buoy before rising seas forced eoast guardsmen to halt res- cue operations. The Admiral Benson, en route from California ports to Portland, went ashore Saturday night in a dense fog. Although the exact cause of the wreck was not determined, some of the res- -| cued passengers related gossip that the wreckage of the steam schooner Laurel, on Peacock spit, was mistaken for the first buoy which guides ves- | sels into the river. The laurel went aground on the spit last summer and broke amidships with the loss of one life. Hope that the Admiral Benson could be floated was expressed by Carl Strout, district superintendent of the Pacific Coast Steamship com- pany; owners of the vessel. Strout said the ship, valued at $700,000 was it the night, while the » wi Throughout pSirad beside bonfires, the crew aboard the Benson intermit- signalled tently that all was well on board. Interment Held Here Of Harriet Hubbard Interment was made here, Sunday, Besides the Monteiths, her father | and mother and a brother accompa- | .. | Ried the body here. Saskatchewan Turning Attention to Highways Hitting North Dakota ACh tld Boy Wounded in Arm As Rifle Discharges Jamestown, N. D., Feb. 17.—(#)— Wounded in the left arm when a rifle he was cleaning discharged, Oscar Erickson, 12-year-old son of William Erickson, Ypsilanti, was brought to a local hospital early today where the bullet was extracted. It was lodged near the bone. Miss Mary 8. Francis as the first principal. A day school had been earlier established by the church and at that time Bowdle was the nearest wn. The work of St. Elizabeth’s was carried on during the Messiah Craze of 1890 and one of the great native leaders mentioned in Indian history, Chief Gall, lies buried in St. Eliza- beth’s cemetery. | In 1897 fire broke out in the main | building of the school and the build- | ing was destroyed. In 1911 a new | church was built which was the larg- jest in the Niobrara Deanery, and the old church was moved to the bottom of the hill to be used as a meeting house. In 1925 Rev. Philip Deloria resigned his work after 40 years of service and moved to White Swan, where the \church built him a home to spend {the remainder of his life. Rev. Wil- }liam Holmes was transferred from Santee to Wakpala, where he worked | until 1929 when he died from a heart attack, Second Fire in ’28 | A Second tire took place at Christ- ;Mas time in 1928, originating in the church, destroying the building. A {new building, “Cathedral of the Standing Rock Mission,” was built. One of the interesting features of St. Elizabeth's is its bell which was {given to it back in the earliest days by the children of St. Peter's church, Germantown, Pa. This bell, weigl ing nearly three-quarters of a ton, has called the Indians for half a century. Rev. K. Brent Woodruff, Sioux Falls, is warden at St. Elizabeth's, coming to the work two. years ago. His father is Dean of Cathedral at Sioux Falls. Rev. Woodruff is also presiding presbytor of the Standing Rock reservation. Mrs. Mary G. Mc- Kibbon is principal, and has worked for 10 years at St. Elizabeth's, Two Moorhead Youths Will Serve Terms in State Training School Moorhead, Minn., Feb. 17.—(P}— Two Moorhead school boys, 15 and 16 years old, today were committed by Judge C. A. Nye to the state training school at Red Wing after they plead- ed guilty to charges of third-degree burglary. ‘The charges were the outgrowth of \ the destruction of more than $2,000 worth of property in an elevator at Finkle siding, south of here. They are to remain in the institution until 21 years old, unless paroled earlier. ‘Ten thousand tons of fuel oil are consumed on one round trip by the ‘Miner Leviathan. |New Way to Improve Skin A wonderful discovery is the new | French process which gives MELLO- | GLO Face Powder its unparalleled smoothness. and makes it stay on |longer. The purest powder made—its | color is tested. Never gives a pasty {or flaky look! Will not smart the | skin or enlarge the pores. Give a ) youthful bloom. Remember the tame |Zaae Finney’s Drug Store. Adv. HelpYour Kidneys an eee ith Kidney ties. ‘bothered with’ constant backache: irritations and getting up at _ Isabel Shields and Verna Holmes; 1 | Bulletin News BROOKHART THREATENS Washington, Feb. 17.—()—N tlee was given today by Senator Brotkhart, of lowa, 2 Republican ary, that unless the judiciary committee ordered a favorable re- port on the Norris resclution for ® prohibition investigation he would carry the contest for that investigation te the floor of the senate. CHINESE ARMING Shanghai, Feb. 17.—(7)—Jap- anese semi - official reports state today that war preparations are proceeding throughout North China. The Shansi and other northern forces ate sald to have mobilized and to be moving southward against Chiang Kai- Shek. It is reported that fight- ing occurred Saturday near Kweiteh on the Lunghai railway. SAVING SHIP HOPELESS Portland, Ore. Feb. 17.—(P}— Hope of saving the coastal steam- er Admiral Benson, aground on Peacock Spit, was abandoned at noon today, and all efforts were direeted toward the rescue of 47 members of the crew still aboard the liner, held fast by the treach- ercus sands, TARDIEU GOVT. FALLING Paris, Feb. 17.—(P)\—The resig- nation of the Tardieu govern- ment, which hag been in office slightly more than three months, loomed today when the govern- ment fell cn a fourth consecutive vote of confidence 286 to 281. FLYERS LEAVE LIMA Lima, Peru, Feb. 17—(?)—Lieu- tenants Will White and Clement McMullen, U. S. army flyers, who arrived here this morning en reute to Buenos Aires, hopped off shortly after noon for Arica. FULTON COMING BACK Rochester, Minn., Feb. 17.—() Fred Fulton, plasterer - fighter, will stage 2 comeback in Roches- ter, his former hometown, March 3. No opponent has been picked yet. Half of Old Currency Is Replaced With New Washington, Feb. 17.—(/)}—More than half of the old paper currency has been taken out of circulation and replaced with the new size bills since they were first issued, last July. Testifying before the house appro- priations committee on the first de- ficiency bill, G. O. Barnes, assistant treasurer, said that of $696,000.000 in National bank notes in circulation, $410,000,000 had been replaced by the new currency. The work of placing the new bills in circulation, he added. made neces- sary the employment of a large num- ber of. extra employes in the treasury department at times reaching a maxi- mum of about 270. A large portion pf these tempor- ary employes probably will be kept on until the end of the present fiscal year “because we have not been able to get the old notes in as fast as we expected when we started,” he added. Egyptian carpenters possessed prac- tically every tool used by modern members of the craft 3500 years ago. __—_—_—_—_—_—_— — —— Bladder Irregular? If functional Bladder Irritation dis- turbs your sleep, or causes Burning | or Itching Sensation, Backache, Leg | Pains, or muscular aches, making you | feel tired, depressed, and discouraged, why not try the Cystex 48 Hour Test? Don't give up. Get Cystex today. Put it to the test. See for yourself how quickly it works and what it does. Money back if it doesn't. bring quick “| subjected the past three days. MISSING CORPSE OF BOY NOT YET FOUND | Diggers Fail to Locate Melvin Horst’s Body in Back Yard of Accused Man Wooster, Ohio, Feb. 17.—(?)—Ex- | Pcctation of finding the body of Mel- vin Horst, 4, by digging in the back | yard of the former Orrville home of Charlies Hanna, was abandoned at that Melvin was buried there Dec. 27, 1928, the dav he mysteriously dis- @ppeared, by Eari Conald. Both Hanna and Conald are held! | in jail at Wooster. They signed statement: Friday accusing each other of having killed Melvin in a garage near hit home in Orrville. Each denied the other's accusation and steadfastly maintained they did not know what was done with the body. Today however, Hanna told Detec- tive Ora Slater that Conald, after al- -jlegediy killing the boy, buried the body in Hanna's back yard at night. Workers dug in the back yard of Hanna's former home for six hours. then convinced the body was not ‘there, ordered the hole filled in. Officers said Hanna probably told the story of the burial to gain tem- porary respite from the hammering of questioning to which he has been Hoover Hospitality Makes More Servants A White House Need Washington, Feb. 17.——~()—Hoo- ver hospitality has made necessary addition of more servants to the white house staff. Lieutenant Colonel U. 8. Grant. 3rd | director of public buildings. asked appropriation on the basis of 77 em- Ployes this year, as compared with 62 last year, in hearings on the first deficiency bill. Colonel Grant explained to the house appropriations committee that but seven new positions had been created, the additional employes be- ing employed as “extra waiters, or for checking hats, coats, and so forth, end then for cleaning up what has to be done ai a i EEE ‘State Electricians: Holding Exams Here’ } : — e ved here is ioorning vo participate q to. poe oh Tn stal the office of H. L. Reade, | State fire marshal. Bentley is a mem- | ber of the examiners. Verne Hoar, of Fargo, also will attend and give > jtalk. He is northwestern represen. ; tive of the Westinghouse company. | MINNESOTA ‘PROF’ DEAD Minneapolis, Feb. 17.—(P)—Dr. Wil-- lam Otis Beal, 56, assistant professor and chairman of the department of astronomy at the University of Min- nesota died today at university hos- pital from the effects of a reneral breakdown from which he hed been seriously ill for three weel:, Medicine for cold and — coughs Over 75 Years of Success Used in 184 Hospitals and Institutions 2 Meals Day, Plenty Water, Helps Stomach: “Since I drink plenty water, eat 2 good meals a day and take Adlerika | now and then, I've had no trouble with my stomach.”—C. DeForest. | Unlike other medicine, Adlerik: acts on BOTH upper and lower bow- el, removing poisonous waste which | caused gas and other stomach trou- , ble. Just ONE spoonful relieves gas, | sour stomach and sick headache. Let Adlerika give your stomach and bowels a REAL cleaning and see how good you feel! Lenhart Drug Storc. Btop suffering. One applica- tion of soothing PAZO INTNENT will quickly improvement, and satisfy you com- pletely. Try Cystex today. Only 60c. Hall's Drug Store.—Adv. OCCIDENT. LYON’S BEST OR CLIMAX These brands are special patent flour made for those people who appreciate the best. Test these flours in your own kitchen., We guaran- tee they will make better baked foods than any other flour. Cost More - Worth It! RUSSELL- MILLER MILLING CO.