The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 6, 1930, Page 9

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‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1930--- = MANDAN NEWS cy || Sulleun News —j|ARTHUR T. HADLEY, EDUCATOR, || — ashes ot it [President Emeritus of Yale First Man to Hold Post Who Was Not Clergyman Highway Department Grants County Petition for Six Miles Into Menoken Six miles more of oil-and-gravel Surfaced road is to be constructed by | Brilliant Intellectually, He Also| Was Physical Champion and Knew Football to increase the tariff on casein from 514 to 8c a pound. The present rate is 2!c and this was unchanged by the player in New Haven. He was apt at son and Mellon for information tennis, St, Joseph to battle wolves for two as to the extent to which the fed- Mere en, peceeteian Sid idea, which he would debate for|Who won ® $20,000 Meal home at a ton, Mandan, Napoleon, | #4 Bismarck before leaving for Far- hours, that it would be a better game |Teal estate exhibition, intends that a New Salem Enter poet bes od prises ny elephant keeper THeRe’s ours BORN, ETC. , Kobe, 5 . 6.—()—Dr. | bY encycl ic information on 5 . “pegged ad East Orange, N. J.—Howard Wyre, Alpin ‘climber: he was supposed to |%8¥S onan island where a marauding pereery played with 10 men instead of nine. | flood of letters from unmarried ladies TO START THIS AFTERNOON CENSUS ASSISTANTS Arthur T. Hadley, 73, president em- ; elephants. + ° ~geszeae mere "| DIES ABOARD SHIP NEAR JAPAN] er smcssce mm 56 High School Basketeers| Sssrecs-" ee Lr gz choo aSketeers brraepey deta hd rel ipsa as the best chess and whist |nunters have gone by plane to Fort In Mandan for Tournament sy ta atts bet mesa on the int ual side, better than OR EX Mandan Shriners plan to make their} international settlements. .. .. .. . | aot Walter Camp; he was f t dis- BACHELOR ENGAGED Ashley, Flasher, Hazelton, Lin- praia a waite Ginn abn | KNOWLEDGE STUPENDOUS |cusine baseball and hea ene. fina | Detrolt.—G. Cecil Covill, bachelor, if He terested shall cease. Therefore he desires i. acces, am in ertiodiat. rig known that he is engaged to Miss authority on the strategic side of Na- |Margaret Graham, a Scotch lassie of | 4, poleon’s campaigns. Once at a cir-| St. Thomas, Ont. a Mandan Will Not Play Until NAMED BY HIGGINS Tomorrow; Ashley Aces oo —— First Team Arriving Billings Only County: of 13 in District Not Represented by Enumerator LIQUOR IMPORTS CUT Ww » Mar. 6—(P)—A decrease of more than fifty per cent in the amount of liquor ex- ported from Canada to the Unit- ed States in December and Janu- ary, as compared to the same months a year previous, was in- | dicated in figures made public eritus of Yale university, died today | Arthur Twining Hadley was born in| bank teller, believes he was hypno- aboard the round-the-world tourist |New Haven, Conn., April 23, 1856, the | tized by two gypsy women. Changing | ship Empress of Australia. only child of the late Professor James |20 dimes into dollar bills for them he |_ The Empress of Australia, which | Hadley, of Yale collcge, and of Anne |consented to have his future looked pre: Dr. Hadley boarded in New York last | Twining Hadley—He was prepared for |into. He was told to put his hand | December 3 for a world cruise, docked | College at the Hopkins Grammar !over a large piece sum of money. A | yesterday from China. school (New Haven) and entered |gypsy placed a handkerchief over his Pneumonia was given as the cause | Yale in 1872. He was elected to Delta |hand, muttering. Dazed, Wyre says, |of death. Mrs. Hadley was accom- Seg ty hits Sper year, Keck he later found ap the gypsies and 8 | Panying the educator on the tour. sophomore year, $1,000 had vanished. He has caused SH ein TERREE Gree te cee oat Lowman. |. Stricken, the noted educator, writer, | Delta Kappa Epsilon in his junior | an arrest. western North Dakota district were soya | lecturer and economist died yesterday | year. He was als: a member of the —— i named this afternoon by Milton K. LEAGUERS SUMMONED after a two-day illness. News of his | Senior Society of Skull and Bones. STILL HAVE CHAMPAGNE ‘Mandan, superivsor. 7 Ww m, Mar. 6—()—Ar- | death was received here last night. Valedictorian of Class Chicago.—A bottle of champagne on | Higgins, , votiatal thar L. Faubel, secretary of the | He sailed with Mrs. Hadley from New| He was valedictorian of his class|nas been poured over a rail, over the the program while tonight at 7:30/ Work will begin immediately on the} American tariff league: Warren | York on December 3. and took Woolsey and Bristed|jast rail to be put in place to com- O'clock the Ashley Aces clash with the |ctual collection of score F. Doane, editor of the Manufac- | Besides his widow and Hamilton | scholarships. He was tle recipient of | plete a new double track for the Hazelton hg) and Se ss bake on rl Yrs thes of | turer, published by the Manufac- | Hadley, a son, he is survived by an-| Winthrop prizes for “students most Pennsylvania between New York and The 10th is the fast da: discount on Gas bills. Fifty-six basketball players, making couches ‘were gathering, ia Mandan coaches were gat “A ‘this afternoon’ for the annual Fifth}, Thirteen enumerdtors to assist him) today by Assistant Secretary ioe n turers club, of Philadelphia, and {other son, Morris, also a lawyer in| thoroughly acquainted with the Greek ate. census will be confidential, according | John Lerch, New York attorney, |New York, and a daughter. Mrs. |ard Latin poets,” the Clarke prize for | CTMCAE, Too bodhi to the vera “dies today were summoned to appear | Nicholas Moseley of this city, whose | the solution of astronomical problems, | . goiden spike was driven in. before the senate lobby committee | husband is provost of Albertus Mag-| and one of the Townsend prizes for tomorrow for questioning con- | nus college. English composition. 137 SAVED FROM FLOE cerning reports that they have ! ~ Carried Out Intentions He studied political science in New| sakhachhkala, Russia. — Having | occupied the offices of Senator | ‘When Arthur Twining Hadley ré-| Haven for a year after his graduation | sitteq-150 miles in five days on an| Grundy, Republican, Pennsyl- | sigced the presidency of Yale univer- | in 1676 and continued his studies for |i. tice in the Caspian Sea, 137 men vania. | sity 1m 1921 he carried out an inten- | the next two years at the University have been rescued. | tion 22 years previously. | of Berlin. On his return from Europe i RUM RUNNER KILLED Texas, ai to the U. S. government, and only Having drawn a first round bye, the SAtuTAY figithes coticeriiing sects ;/and areas will be published. The records will not be for public inspec- tion. Enumerators to assist Mr. . in their respective counties follow: Adams—George Tripp, Hettinger. Billings—None. Bowman—R. C. Joyce, Scranton. Dunn—John Brown, Manning. Golden Valley—Zosima V. Vlasoff, Beach, Grant—Edmund Dubs, New Leip- ponent e Don’t delay! Avoid a nasty siege w a cold or sore throat, and their m« dangerous complications. Put sot Mistol up your nose—or gargle a lit and feel the quick, cool reliefast raw surface relaxesin comfort. Blanc Mistol soothes the sorenest away, a: before you know it, you're “+ Mistol checké infections in the ne and throat where dangerous troub: often start. Doctors use Mistol. Yo} druggist has it. Get a bottle! Made by the Makers of Nuj Shortly after his election as head of | in the autumn of 1879, he was made a EI Mar. 6—(7)—| the university in 1899 he informed } tutor in Yale college, giving instruc- One Mexican: was killed and an- | the board of trustees that he would} tion in Greek, logic, German and other ded today as rum run- | retire from the presidency when he| Roman law. His tutorship ended in ners renewed their assault upon | reached the age of 65 and more than | 1883, and about that time began his ev cro one work in the field of the history and h segs w | reminded the corporation of his de-| science of railroad transportation, in on egg yg i Hl eal -— Berane {termination to do so. He resigned] which he accomplished considerable South a None of the | the presidency in order to devote his | important work, and raised himself to kgtrirst preted cy Satroimes {time to the study of economics, to| the position of an acknowledged au- hi in the fight wes ne | Witing and lecturing. thority. From 1883 to 1886 he was who engaged e fight was re- The Yale corporation noted these | university lecturer on railroad admin- — rae although the fir- | acts in a minute of commendation, | istration. In the latter year he was gi Bred rl le adopted at the time of the retirement | geek ‘i nee : oh ee boo acmpeol rt i: ye de} ment, PROTESTS REPEAL of President Hadley, and further said: | science in the graduat Pi | & year before arriving at that age zig. Hettinger—James Bannon, Mott. Mercer—Otto Poschadel, Stanton. Morton—Charles H. Roth and Rob- ert Franzen, Mandan; and Frank Roth, Huff. Oliver—Charles M. Whitmer, Yucca. Slope—H. A. Ekholm, Marmarth. Stark—M. J. Raschko, Dickinson. take these harm- less little tablets. Ask the druggist for Pape’s Cold ches Compound; only 35c. Watch Flasher “Statics” — Danceison, Hutchens, centers; Thomas, Hanson, Johnson, ; Dennis, Torxetson,| French Delegation to “Now he claims his freedom believing that at such a micway maturity a change of occupation is in many ways and in 1891 he was transferred to the chair of political economy in Yale college, which he held till his election how quickly all mucous discharge ends, your head clears and stops aching, and Dr. Hibbs better than a holiday for an active | to the presidency in 1899. man. “His fulfilled term of 22 years seems a brief incident in the history of the university, viewed from the beginning, but as a chapter relating to the 13th | presidency of Yale there will be more to record 2s to his administration) he skin of youth lies in every box | than as to many which have preced- | of new wonderful MELLO-GLO Face voiced today before the house ju- diclary committee by Louis J. Taber, master of the National Grange, who said he was author- ized by the organization's execu- tive committee to speak for the grange’s nearly one million mem- ber’s in 34 states. Naval Parley Leaves Paris, Mar. .6.—(#)—The French delegation to the naval conference, headed by Aristide Briand, foreign minister in the new cabinet of Andre Tardieu, left here at noon today for London. Their chief, M. Tardieu, re- ceived an ovation at the railroad sta- DENTIST soreness all ter than © || CAREFUL G “doping!” "Remnaetie th name. Any drugstore. PAPE’ Makes You Look Years Younger COLD Compound ed it.” service, was in the city gags H ni Jald L. Rust. Mandan “Braves”—Captain Wilferd Keeping Lookout for ‘Midnight Marauder’ tion as he bade them farewell. dieu postponed his departure due to the gravity of the Toulouse flood sit- uation. —_——————""F | Farm Facts | 1. | O— Six. points which every good poul- (Speed) ‘The more feed that can be market- ‘Tar- his home here. health ever since. ed through good dairy cows the greater the income from the enter- Shaee some prise. Do not store articles of fur, woolen or feathers which you know will never be used. They are breeding places for More milk and butter on the farm table mean, eventually, bigger fig- ures on the milk check. North Dakota county extension agents can supply registered or certi- fied alfalfa seed for this spring's Planting. Select for incubation only stan- Father of Prominent Flyer, Speed Holman, Dead in Minneapolis Minneapolis, Mar. 6. e Judson Holman, 71, life-long resident of Minneapolis and father of Charles Holman, Minneapolis aviator trymal as essential in grow- a ing healthy chicks are: Clean chicks; |*%4 traffic manager of Northwest Air. hatching chicks early; clean brooder house; clean ground; clean feed, and} “yy, clean management. ways, Inc., died late Wednesday at Holman had an apoplectic stroke last July, and had been in ill Left are his widow, a daughter, and ——_— | Additional Sports ee eres SS Wilton Workmen Win Second Contest from Bismarck Here, 32-30) jer asigned-an ordeal that he al- With Gilmore caging the winning field goal 10 seconds before the game ended, the Wilton A. O. U. W. basket- ball team defeated the Bismarck Workmen 32 to 30 at the Bismarck high school gymnasium last night. ‘The game was hardfought through- Was Not Clergyman After paying tribute to President Hadley’s administration for the not-{ able progress made by the university during it, the minute said: “Although the first president in its | history who was not a clergyman, Yale has experienced no loss in spir- baccalaureate and matriculation a dresses have been most valuable con- tributions to religious literature keenly appreciated for their intel- lectual and moral stimulus by young and old. The Christian ideals and traditions of the university were never stronger than they are today.” It was said of President Hadley that his knowledge covered a wider range of subjects than almost any other university president or profes- sor, As a college student he had tak- en a large majority of academic prizes and one of the favorite pas- times of upper classmen was to lift young Hadley upon a box and make ways creditably passed through. As @ Yale professor his intellectual pas- sion was railroad transportation, but | there was hardly a subject in the col- lege catalogue he could not teach. He ‘spoke all the European languages | freely and it was said there were few, | dead or living that he could not read itual influence under Mr. Hadley. His \ Powder. The purest powder made—j its color is passed by the U. S. Gov- ernment. No pastiness, flakiness or irritation. A new French process makes it spread more smoothly and prevents large pores. No more shiny | noses—it stays on longer. Use MEL-| LO-GLO. Finney’s Drug Store—Adv. | DIAMOND RING James W. Marek $50.00 r-. Weer Office Salesroom, Third St. South of Hotel Prince Bismarck, N. Dak. Cord Tires New Low Prices Health Suffers When Kidney Irregularities Disturb Sleep. © Tackche: dott sake + Kidneys, with “Fully Guaranteed” 80x38 ..2.....$ 4.00 a sabes 48 : 5.25 29x4.50 ... 5.75 30x4.50 5.85 28x4,75 6.65 29x4.75 .. 6.80 29x5.00 .. 7.10 30x5.00 .. 7A5 28x5.25 .. 8.25 80x5.25 .. 8.75 31x5.25 . 9.10 29x5.50 . 9.45 33x6.00 ...... 12.00 Take advantage of these new low prices now. Phone 356 Crushed Zap Miner . Rests Easily Today Having suffered a crushed pelt and hips and spine injuries in an out and the lead changed hands sev-| with understanding. eral times. Wilton had beaten the Waist Champion Capital City club in an earlier game| His attainments, however, were not at Wilton 29 to 27. all strictly scholastic He was re-/ “A farm without trees is like a dog without fleas; there is something You Don’t Know What Low- Cost Power Means Until You Have a John Deere Tractor For Your County We have a splendid open- ing for a reliable man to eel Or large line a Te ee, Tracts, and Pure Food Products, Our “Free Gift” Plan opens every door to you. You sell | where others cannot. * Old, established company with contract that beats all others four ways. Let us tell you how. Write THE LANGE CO. Box 703 DE PERE, WISCONSIN children are: Proper food, sunshine rest, proper eloghes, protection from rest, infection and a wholesome mental outlook on life. Bute -wells.sre covered figured Paper, choose a plain colored curtain material. Taft’s Condition Is Declared Unchanged Washington, Mar. 6—(?)—William Taft and Ensembles in tweeds and mix- tures, many differ- ent shades only. $1500 Others at $27.50 - $35 to $49.50 Bismarck Cloak Shop Better Quality Garments At Popular Prices ‘American Casualties Of Siberia War, Home that Pegred unchanged from yesterday. \ In no other tractor for your plowing and rrr re relly arrertenns and | other heavy farm jobs can you get the Hlcinity, wilt iad to learn that | economy of operation found in the light vote ismarck, North weight, powerful John Deerc. mi sl Dakota, has, been Api eT toe peambent tations: ork "| On thousands of farms in all parts of the country, the John Deere Tractor is establishing records for low fuel and oil consumption—for low up-keep—for un- interrupted service. It gives you ample power to do your work, with only of ps to meet emergen- O. P. VOLD, Prop. tore. sop you about them, 216 Main Bismarck N. D. ‘under, Inc., 1914 Minneapolis, Minn. It. gives you light weight because it is a tractor of. , sturdier parts. It is casy to handle both in the field and on the belt jobs. It is a tractor that will give you de- pendable service at low cost for many years to come. ' There is no doubt in our minds that the John Deere is the ty. :tor best suited to farnt . rape gi yg Tad t i Here is an opportunity to get a good used piano for the small unpaid bal- ance on same. Easy terms. The : piano is now in this vicinity. Mi For full particulars, write the ‘ Stone Piano Company. | Your stomach i that your is é You think perhaps you sre suffo- ‘You are and pray for quick rele ag Se const Aisi Mentha and in ten minutes the gas disappears, the pressing on the Bismarck Seislemneiit rae a5 i E Fargo, North Dakota ‘ HE i i

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