Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, MARCH 10, 1980 BELSONMEMORIAL | NWONORTHDAKOTA GRTS ADD OF LIONS WAR VETERANS GET}. GAM " HEARGRLS’ APPEAL GALLANTRY HONORS Fe ose Would Be ‘Easy Victim’ Is jGrand Forks Recreational Di- David Schwartz and John -D. Cause of Holdup rector Presents Need of Harnden Are Recoignized ae Helping Council Here by President Hoover Minnesota Regional Cage Champions to Be Named This Week St. Paul, Mar. 10—(#)—All entrants ;to the state high school basketball ; American League : 1 Head Forecasting ‘utsmcat’ si ie°tcepton the one of the First region, are to be td jicked in regional t ts Fri-| p: i Season S$ Success?" MUSE. {Bismarck and Mandan Pitted Only one district champion has Against Each Other for been named in the First region, Lebow A Lake. The other three are,to be se- State Meet Rights lected this week-end with the regional | tournament slated for next week. | Indoor Season To i Reach Peak With | Illinois’ Relays —- District Titlists Play This Week | In Region Clashes Solves Crime KIDNAP AND TORTURE RACKET GANG BROKEN UP IN CHICAGO | [HoT poc: | DOG! | Additional Sports | ner see Barnard Believes New Material Is Improving; Has No Fear on Money End ® 15 ‘ARE HELD, TWO HUNTED With the selection of 15 of the 16 district champions last Friday and | Saturday nights, North Dakota high | school basketball fans today were ‘busy picking their favorites for re- {gional honors to be determined this week-end. Sub-district champions, Sherwood and Bowbells, are to settle the six- teenth district championship either tonight or Tuesday, and will meet | {Alexander in the regional tourna- | }Sentman, Simpson, Tolan, Mei-!ment at a place to be determined ; Two North Dakota war veterans, one of the World war and the other | of the Philippine campaign, have | been cited for gallantry in action by @irection of President Hoover, it has been announced by officials at Fort Lincoln, The Lions club went on record, at the noon luncheon, today, in favor of individually contributing to the Ben 1 Carl Eielson memorial. D. E. Ship- ley, district deputy governor, spoke in favor of the plan proposed to erect some form of lasting tribute to the intrepid North Dakota air pilot who lost his life in the icy Siberian wilds and lauded his heroism and modesty in the course of his remarks, Ransoms From Frightened Vic- tims Amounted to $35,000 Each Past Two Years Chicago, Mar. 10.—(7)—A band of extortionists that plied its trade of j kidnap and torture from New York BY BRAN BELL Tampa, Fla., Mar. 10—?)/—E. S. Barnard, president of the American League, after a visit to several Florida training camps, finds no fault with the baseball prospect and that of his league in particular. “I believe we will have an exciting race in the American League,” he They are David Schwartz of the ‘World war, who enlisted from Gold- en Valley, and John D. Harnden, who enlisted at Jamestown. | [228532 | by BHE : og ae said. “Certainly two clubs, and doubtless others, have been improved ; over last year and there should be some great competition, I am con- vinced the Detroit and Chicago clubs will be stronger. ! “If these two clubs have been strengthened as I believe they have,| the indications point to some worth- while competition. “The number of young players of bility coming up in the last two years} has been impressive. We are return- ing to normal conditions in the game. The quality of play will be steadily | improved as a result of the arrival of | these young players who themselves will become better qualified as they gain experience. “During the post-war depression— and I am speaking now of the playing end of the game—the crop of young players with sufficient ability to com- mand the attention of major league scouts was reduced to a minimum. tt is not yet a bumper crop, neverthe- If] er, Canby, Warne, McDer- mott Shining Lights Chicago, Mar. 10.—(#)—The middle- western indoor track season will read its peak this week-end at Champaign, Til, where stars of the Big Ten will |battle leading performers from the! Cavalier at Grand Forks in the fifth; Missouri Valley, Southwest, East and Southeast in the annual renewal of the Illinois relay carnival. Record smashing promises to be plentiful, following the performances of Western Conference athletes in the! lannual indoor championships at the University of Minnesota Saturday night. Seldom without a great hurdler, the | Big Ten this season has Lee Sentman, ' of Illinois, who in his last two appear- ances has tied and broken a world record. In the Big Ten meet Sentman set a new mark for the 70-yard high Wednesday. | Wahpeton and Farg '¢ paired in | the first region and will meet at Fargo; Valley City plays Jamestown at Jamestown in the second region; Mandan and Bismarck meet in the; third region at Mandan; Reeder and Hebron clash at Dickinson in the fourth region; Grand Forks opposes region; the Walsh county Aggies play:/ ; Starkweather in the sixth region at a) place to be determined today, and rolette plays at Minot in the seventh region. The winners of the regional tourna- | ments are to play at Mandan, March | 21 and 22 for the state title. | jLola Trus' ational director, was called on to give |her talk on girls activities, the club enjoyed a program of music. Halverson and Mrs. Jessie Thompson Graham sang a duet, Mrs. Art Bauer, their bit aoatae agli with two piano solos and pleting the program with twb robin songs. Before the speaker of the day, Miss , Grand Forks girls recre- Henry rs. Graham com- Girls Werk Presented Judge A. M. Christianson intro- duced Miss Trusty, himself making a short talk on the services the Lions are giving the Community and ex- plaining that the matter to be pre- {sented by the Grand Forks visitor was Fargo and Forks Teams to Battle in continuation of work in that line started here two years ago, when a woman's and girls’ work council was organized, headed by Mrs. Al. Barrett. This council has 30 to 40 girls on the south side organized and has been holding meetings at the Wachter “Bonnie” Dundee, the handsome young detective who solved the two murders recounted in “The Avenging Parrot,” is back again in a new story by the same author, Anne Austin. “Murder Backstairs,” which begins in The Bismarck Tribune, Tuesday, pre- sents Dundee with the toughest prob- lem of his career. Don't miss it, Fleck Motor Sales Co. Schwartz, formerly a private in Co. A, 358th Infantry, 90th Division, A. E. | F., with another soldier, volunteered to carry an important message after several runners had failed in the at- tempt on the St. Mihiel front, near Les Huit Chemins, Vilcey, France, Sept. 26, 1918. Going through a heavy enemy barrage of artillery and machine gun fire they succeeded in delivering the message, which re- sulted in the saving of many lives. Harden, formerly a private in Co. B, 33d Infantry, United States Volun- teers, aided in the pursuit of s@lpe- rior forces of the enemy under the | insurgent General Tinio in Northern Luzon, Philippine Islands, Dec. 4 to 18, 1899, through @ dangerous country, | through hardships and exposure, | thereby, assisting in the liberation of A silver star may be placed on the ribbon of the Victory medal awarded | to Schwartz and a silver star also jt Chicago was believed broken today | 22 American prisoners Dec. 18, 1899. | because of an ex-wife's tip that her former husband, a wealthy insurance company head, would be an “casy victim.” The “easy victim,” Theodore Kopel- man, faced a string of prisoners at the county jail yesterday and posi- tively identified. six men as the ones who held him captive in a lonely lake resort cottage and threatened him with searing irons until he pay- ed_ransom. Kopelman then picked out among those rounded up in connection with the gang, his divorced wife, now the Sweetheart of one of the ring leaders. In addition to the seven leaders, seven men and another woman are held as witnesses and two more are being sought. Netted $35,000 Each | Patrick Roche, chief investigator | for the state's attorney’s office, said | And now you can enjoy your “hot dogs” and still be a ‘egetarian, thanks to Dr. Davis Wesstn, a foad may be placed on the ribbon of the | the ring’s operations netted a yearly | chemist of Montclair, N. J, who is Philippine campaign medal awarded | verage of $35,000 for each member, | shown here proudly disayng a to Harnden. | while one of the men, he said, had | t confessed his sh last year was $75,- jee of frankfurters that le made 000. He said the operations of the Made Distributor of Oldsmobile-Viking hurdle event, and is favored to with- jstand the best competition other sec-; ‘tions of the country can offer in the ; Grand Recreations and Y. M. C.!school. It wants to expand its oper- ations now and wants the approval A. Meet Thursday for and support of the service clubs Northwest Title less it is growing steadily and the re- tults are already apparent. “From the standpoint of prospective ‘attendance my observations have been | cvent. from cottonseed meal. Dr. Wessen clams hs “meatless meat” has\wo to three times more protein thy the AERSERSEE in it. o Ez ga2 highly satisfactory. Interest in base-| George Simpson, the flyer from pall everywhere seems to be enthusi-|Ohio State, and Eddie Tolan, Michi- astic and I expect a splendid season!gan negro flash, will renew their n every respect.” {struggle for supremacy, but will en- Grand Forks, N. D., Mar. 10.—The | circus had its P. T, Barnum, the/ fight industry had its Tex Rickard, | requires something to occupy its lei- sure time. looked after. Miss Trusty said this generation! The boys are being well But if the boys are} {Inc., has been appointed distributor akg Minot, Donnybrook {counter big trouble in Hubert Meier, of Iowa State, who turned in time of {Big Six conference meet Saturday |night. Play First Fracas 0:06.1 for the 60-yard dash in the Meier's effort was one-tenth of a second better than the recognized mark of 0:06.2, held jointly by Shimp- ‘and basketball has its Red Blakely. | \'This master showman of the court, after a few year's absence will be back again Thursday night treading the same University of North Dakota ar- !mory floor that reverberated to his girls, that is not saving the nation. Grand Forks decided to apply recre- ational supervision and Miss Trusty and two part-time workers have or- ganized the girls for playground rec- reation and this winter also added saved and nothing is done for the; | magic gracefulness in days bygone. son, Chet Bowman, Jimmy Quinn, | Loren Murchison and Albert Francis- ; co. In Independent Go | impson tied the latter mark in: | beating Tolan Saturday night at Min-| | neapolis. i Henry Canby, of Iowa, and Verne! | McDermott, Illinois captain, will be! | primed to try to even up for their de- jfeat in the pole vault Saturday night, | jby Tommy Warne of Northwestern. 0, N. D., Mar. 10.—()—Draw- | Warne won the event with 13 feet 3% | Fargt i} rf ings for the state independent bas- | inches, with Canby second, and Mc- Bismarck Phantoms Battle De- fending Champions, Cando, Thursday at 3 o’Clock Jamestown Thursday, Friday and/@nd fourth. Saturday of this week were an-, Barney Berlinger, of the University; Red Blakely, the showman and crowd pleaser, is captain and center of the Grand Recreation basketball team of Fargo which comes to town Thursday night to meet the Grand) Forks Y. M. C. A. Independents for | the championship of the northwest. Blakely teamed with Miller, New-| gymnasium activities. There is a dia- mond ball league for the summer and basketball teams for the winter, while among the kiddies a toy orchestra has been promoted. The ball team enter- tained a visit from a similar team jfrom Winnipeg and paid their guests a return trip and game, which the gard, Arnold and Greenfield to pre-| Forks business men backed financial- | sent the strongest basketball team in| Bison history. ‘¢ Strangely enough, Newgard, Miller ketball tournament to be conducted at | Demott in a four-way tie for third! and Arnold will be with Blakely | Thursday when he returns to Grand and Newgard are nounced here today by Edward M.|f Pennsylvania, will be back to de-| coaching at Valley City and Hills- Yocum, secretary of the Independent ; fend his all-around title, and unless! poro, respectively, and Steve Gorman, Forks. Miller ly. She asked the Lions and other service clubs of the city to get behind. Mrs. Barrett's organization, perhajs Forks have got behind their girls |recreational work. St. Patrick’s Dinner Next Lions were notified that there will be no luncheon next Monday noon. in the form business men of Grand/| Basketball league of North Dakota. ;some new star appears, is expected to! the genial manager of the Grands, The Westland Duras of Minot and | repeat his victory of last year when/has promised that they will be in- | That evening a dinner will be held at Donnybrook will open the play at 2/he set a new carnival mark for the cluded in the Recreation entourage. p. m.; Cando and Bismarck’s Phan- ay at 3 p. m.; Hope and the | Jamestown Tigers play at 7:30 p. m.| and Crary and Minnewaukan will} complete the first day's play. H Friday's bill include the winners | of the Minot-Donnybrook and Cando- Bismarck contests meeting at 2 p. m.; the Jamestown-Hope and Crary- | Minnewaukan victors play at 3 p. m.; at 7:30 p.m. Enderlin meets Stanley | and is followed by the Hillsboro- | Wyndmere contest. i Semifinals are billed at 10 and 11/ a. m. Saturday with the final game} scheduled for 8:30 p.m. A consola-| tion game for semi-final losers will} precede the title affair. | Frank Cleve, Concordia college di- | rector, has been named to officiate at | the tourney. Drawings announced | today were made by the state board | of directors at the annual meeting in | Valley City in January. Big Ten’s Court | Finale Tonight Minnesota Hopes to Improve Standing, While Hoosiers Have Clinched Third | i | Chicago, Mar. 10—(P—The 1930 Western Conference basketball sea- fon tonight will become history—j largely of Purdue's achievement—| when Indiana invades Minnesota for school basketball tournaments Satur- | iron-man event. Hettinger, Reeder | Win Honor Places Hettinger. N. D.. Mar. 10.—Reeder, district champions, and Hettinger | each placed four men on the first | two all-district teams here following completion of the seventh district tournament Saturday night. The tow teams follow: First Forward—Ryerson, Hettinger. Forward—Striker, Bucyrus. Center—Bacon, Reeder. Guard—Springer, Hettinger. Guard—V. Hilden, Reeder. Second Forward—Barry, Hettinger. Forward—Rutledge, Hettinger. Center—Seteness, Reeder. Guard—Beyers, Rahme. Guard—Wanek, Reeder. Honorable Mention Herzig. Bowman, forward; Larson, Marmarth, center; Omodt, Bucyrus, | guard, Balfour, Killdeer To Battle Tuesday; i Arthur, Lankin and Maxbass won | district consolidated graded _high/ day night. ; Scored in 11 games, with his | » effort set for tonight against Minne- | {6:30 in the den, in honor of St. Pat- | Arnold will make the trip also, Gor- | rick’s day. E. P. Klein, Joe Spies, and man has promised, so only Greenfield | william Couch were appointed to will be missing from this greatest provide decorations. John Sullivan Bison team of all time. | will make a prohibition talk. solving But in his place will be Bobby that knotty problem. The dinner of Rusch, former football and basketball | the evening will be paid by the losing | man at Northwestern, and Bus Bris- team in a membership contest, the tol, who played with the North Da- contending captains being Sofus Rob- | kota freshmen. The Y. M. C. A. team will match; ertson and Abe Tolchinsky. Guests of the day were S. A. Florin, this collection with a machinelike ¢ w. Leifur, Miss Mary Cashel, Mrs.| team which local fans believe to be qj Barrett, E. A. Linderberg, Minne-| unbeatable. Scoring Record Chicago, Mar. 10.—()—Branch Mc- Cracken, captain and center, of the Indiana basketball team, has clinched ; fy, | the 1930 individual scoring title, and | tonight will attempt to set a new all- | time western conference record. y 2 rices of a decade ago MASTERPI |apolis, H. T. Schulte, Mandan, and | Participants on the program, McCracken After | Flashes of Life —+ (By the Associated Press) HAIRCUTS FOR TEN CENTS w cents \ | | | | ve New York politan Museum McCracken today had 138 points, |the museum's m final | sota at Minneapolis. Charles “Stretch” Murphy, of Pur- due, was safely in second place with 137 points in 10 games, seven points less than he scored last season in 11 contests, to set the present record. | McCracken tonight will need six points to break Murphy's mark. B Basketball Champs proof. Each treasure i ec y painting or th: device sounds an} eo ts | ii'me | offices. wants i solicitor, the pr the streets a: The gover of : "through | Additional Testimony | State Telephone Body pplications. | Of South Dakota Will |' Be Decided This Week| The Fleck Motor Sales Company, of the Oldsmobile-Viking line of cars for southwestern North Dakota, the Oldsmobile - Viking company an- nounces. The sales rooms and service quar- ters of the Fleck company will be fully equipped for the distribution and maintenance of the cars of this Auto Transportation Firms Should Renew | Licenses by April 1 All certificates and permits hel@ by auto transportation companies in North Dakota expire April 1, and! should be renewed on or before that date, it has been announce@ by the type of make. An invitation is now being extended to visit the Fleck place of business and inspect the two cars. The dis- tributors are pushing the Oldsmobile six and the Viking eight. 10 Killed in Grade Crossing Accidents in 12-Month Period Ten persons were killed and 41 in- jured in 30 grade crossing accidents in North Dakota during the 12-month period ending Jan. 31, 1930, compared to 11 killed and 21 injured in 29 sim- ilar accidents the preceding 12 months, These figures were published in the Bulletin, published by the North Dakota Board of Railroad Commis- stoners, ‘ Taft’s Death Delays North Dakota Cause Argument before the supreme court of the United States on the case in- volving the right of the North Dakota railroad board to order intra-state freight rates has been postponed from March 12 to about April 15. Attorney General James Morris, en route to Washington to argue the case, was stopped at Minneapolis by a notice that the death of Justice San- ford and former Chief Justice Taft had caused postponement of the hear- ing for a month, Meets in Grand Forks Members of the North Dakota Tele- phone association will gather in Grand Forks Tuesday fortheir annual convention, which will continue through Thursday. Representatives of the state rail- |road commission will be present to give assistance on regulatory problems | of the different companies. Headquarters for the convention | will be the Dacotah hotel. | Heard in Grand Forks Fair Auto Crash Suit state railroad commission. The renewal application must be/| completed and returned to the com- mission with the 1929 annual report, the required fee, and insurance cover- age. Aeronautics Inspector To Visit Here March 15, An inspector from Aeronautics Branch, U. 8. Department of Com- | merce, will examire applicants for | pilot and mechanic licenses at the Prince hotel, Bismarck, at 11 a, m.| March 25. Other examinations scheduled by the inspector follow: Dacotah hotel, | Grand Forks, March 21; Parker hotel, Minot, March 23; and Gardner hotel, Fargo, March 27. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR RENT—Warm room in a mod- ern home. Extra large closet. Close in. Call at 410 Seventh street. Two and a quarter million Ameri- cans are expected to pass through Montreal and Queb:: t> and from Europe this year, | when they kidnapped Kopelman, Feb- | and finally freed him, }man to cash it. ring were widespread throughout the east. | Assistant State's Attorney Charles | Miller said he would ask the grand jury to indict the seven leaders, on charges of conspiracy to kidnap for ransom, and added he would seek the maximum penalty in this state— Geath in the electric chair. In the east, Roche said he believed the ring was connected with the kid- napping of labor leaders, racketeers, actors and others during the past two years. Through fear of reprisal, he said, none of those who paid ransom would identify their abductors. Knows of 31 Cases The investigator said he knew of six other torture-kidnappings which he positively attributes to the ring now under arrest and that he had re- Ports of 25 others where the methods were similar. The gang was safe in Chicago, Roche said, as long as it confined its operations to men who feared to go to police. They made their mistake ruary 28, held him prisoner a day in @ bungalow at Camp Lake, Wis., an- other day in a Chicago apartment fter he had real article. \ COPS AND REDS FIGHT\ Paris, Mar. 10—()—Three pde- men were badly bruised" today dispersing a meeting of 20 Com. nists who sang the Internationaic the entrance to a subway ‘stat), Two of the Communists were arres For Sale—At 1-2 price, be: tiful 112-piece set Syracu China dishes. Never unp4c' ed. Asnan. Mrs. S. E. Berg} Bi Dak. Glycerin Mixture Beat) Soda for Sour Stomac! “For quite a time I used soda fo! gas and sour stomach. Then I de cided to try Adlerika and found il) far better than soda.”—Ed McNeill. Just ONE spoonful simple glycer: in, saline, etc., as mixed in Adlerika,) relives GAS and sour stomaca! Acts on BOTH upper and lower bow- el removing old poisons you neyer knew were there. No matter what you have tried for your stomach and} Lard $4,000 and given a check for The men went to his sister, Ger- trude Kopelman, and his Attorney Louis Victor, for the money. When the check was refused payment, they spent a week trying to force Kopel- Finally Kopelman called in Roche and early yesterday, when the six men went to the sister's Michigan boulevard dress shop for the money they were captured. bowels, Adlerika will surprise you! Lenhart Drug Co.—Adv. Instant, soothing rclicf oF Itching froney back. Use PAZO OINTMENT. Try it for PILES Itching, , Bleeding oF Quick Protruding Pites. successful Reliog rrsisitber cases. Ask @EICF for PAzZ0 OINTMENT. In convenient, handy tubes with pile pipe tachment, 75c; or in tin bos, 60c. The New Sweet Shop Opens for Business i the finale of the schedule. | Purdue today was basking in the pleasure of another basketball cham- pionship, made sweeter by the fact| was 32 to 8. . that the Riyerters hammered their} Lankin, twice winner of the state way through Big Ten competition | title, in 1928 and 1929, defeated Bohn- without a defeat—the first time thejsack for the District 2 title at May- trick has been turned since Minnesota | ville, 37 to 10. did it in 1919. Maxbass eliminated Upham for the Purdue scored 383 points in 10) District 5 title at Glenburn. The games, and held opponets to 215, a su-|score was 16 to 11. - periority average of about 18 gael These three will compete with per game. Only Wisconsin led the|Fort Yates, Tuttle, Goodrich and Van Boilermakers in defensive play, hold-|Hook at the state tournament to be ing its opponents to 209 points in 10jheld at Valley Oity Thursday and games. Friday. Wisconsin finished in second place| Balfour and Killdeer play at the! with eight victories and two defeats, !state training school, Mandan, Tues- with Indiana third—win or lose to-|day night, the winner to represent Arthur defeated Svea, finalist in| the state meet last year, for the Dis- trict 1 title at Casselton. The score Grand Forks, N. D., Mar. 10.—(®)— Additional testimony was offered in district court here today in the suit jin which three persons are seeking | ‘$78,000 damages from the North Da- | kota State Fair association for injur- . ies alleged to have been received inj} 1925 when a_ racing automobile ; 'plunged into a crowd of spectess. a a | Witnesses today were J. J. Hefferen, ITALY HIKES AIR BUDGET one of the plaintiffs; Dr. G. M. Wil- Rome.—(#)—Italy's aviation budget jjiamson, who attended one of the for 1930-31 calls for an outlay of $37.- | other victims, and Glen R. Parsons ‘790,000, an increase of almost a mil- former newspaperman, lion dollars over the past year. Of i this some $6,538,550 goes toward civil ‘Invaluable’ Say Mitchell, S. D., Mar. 10.—(?)—Re- gional B champions of the South Da- kota Athletic association meet here | two Friday and Saturday to pick their) istate champion. | The entrants were picked Saturday | night from teams that finished inj? second place of the districts, They |censed ) are Milbank, Selby, Volga, Highmore, Alcester, Mitchell, Delmont, and Hot Springs. Bambino Signs New Contract With Yanks St. Petersburg Fla., Mar. 10.—(P)— Babe Ruth today signed his new con- bab Ebsa TP ESeg ide Fs ae Wednesday Morning © March, 12th, 7 A. M. The public is invited to attend a pre-showing of our new place of business on Tuegday afternoon between 5 < in the airplanes in num- + The Acronautical 40 lie BEREES aviation, the rest being for national defense, pay of army fliers and pen- sions. night. Michigan, co-holder of the; 1929 title with Wisconsin, landed in fourth place, with Illinois fifth, Northwestern sixth and Chicago, Minnesota and Ohio State finishing at the bottom. A defeat for Minne- sota tonight would send the Gophers into a tie for seventh and eighth with Chicago. South Dakota A Cage Meet Comes March 21 Sioux Falls, 8. D., Mar. 10.—()— Eight regional “A” champions of the South Dakota high school athletic league today started tions for the state basketball championship to be decided here, March 21 and 22. The winner will be awarded the state title. Although a “BA” tourna- ment will be held, the winners of the The “A” champions are Aberdeen, Ipswich, White, Huron, Sioux Falls, Salem, Yankton and Lead. For Sale—At 1-2 price, beau- tiful 112-piece set Syracuse China dishes. Never unpack- ed. A sna two tournaments will not meet. District 7 in the state tournament. St. John’s Champions Of Parochial Schools In Minnesota Tourney St. Paul, Mar. 10.—(#)—St. John’s high school of Collegeville, winner of the northwest parochial basketball championship at St. Thomas college here Sunday night, will be the official representative of the northwest in the national Catholic tournament at Chi- eating Cretin my St. Paul, 28 to 18 in the finals. De La of Minneapolis, which has ac- ® invitation to play in the tourney, won third place by St. Thomas academy 25 to 14. at! In the consolation tournament Cot- ‘Winona defeated St. Boniface | in of Cold Spring, 15 to 12. To enter the ‘ip game Cretin won from 15 to 11, and St. John’s tract and the New York Yankees took a two-year lease on his services at $80,000 annually. Pioneer Jamestown Contractor Is Dead Jamestown, N. D., Mar. 10—(#)— William Noel, who for many years has been in the contracting business in Jamestown and who has built many roads in North Dakota and Minnesota died at St. Petersburg, Fla, at 11:30 o'clock Sunday night after a lingering illness of three years, Noel was associated with A. R. Thompson in the W. H. Noel company for many years. In 1924 he went to St. Petersburg where he built paving but retained his business here under the management of Miss Mary Nicrl- He leaves his widow and two sons, Edwin in St. Petersburg, and Leon, | @ student at the University of North Dakota, * For Sale—At-1-2 price, beau- tiful 112-piece set Syracuse China dishes. Never unpack- ed. -A snap. ig Ss. E. Berge- Likes Raw Eggs A world’s cham- pionship in free style raw “egg eating is claimed by Emile J. Gillette, of Mul- berry, Kan., who challenges any- one in the world to a conte Gillette swal- lowed 36 raw eggs within eight minutes at Racine, ‘Wis, He then pre- * pared to down a rival at Osh- kosh, Wis, and was to follow that with’ an- other contest at ‘Waukegan, Il., which he ‘ex: pected to win by a gulp. He is confident he can swallow, 50 eggs in eight min- utes after a bit Society Women MELLO - GLO Face Powder is pre- ‘ferred by beautiful women because it |leaves no trace of flakiness, pastiness. or irritation. Stays on longer — no shiny noses! Made by a new French process—prevents large pores. Spreads |more smoothly — gives a youthful bloom. Very pure. Use MELLO-GLO Face Powder. It’s wonderful.—Adv. Swiftest, Easiest Way To End Bilious Spell ‘When you neglect those first symp- toms of constipation—bad breath, coated tongue, listlessness, the whole system soon’ suffers. Appetite lags. Digestion slows up. You become headachy, dizzy, bilious. It's easy to correct sluggish bowel action! Take a candy Cascaret to- night. See how quickly—and pleas- antly—the bowels are activated. ‘All the souring waste is gently propelled from the system. Regular and Plete bowel action is restored. actually strengthens bowel muscles. |—Adav. com- , Cascarets are made from pure cas- cara, a substance which doctors agree maker. All drug stores have Cascarets, 10c. and 11 p.m. Special entertainment has been arranged for this occasion with souvenirs for the ladies. The public will find at the New Sweet Shop with most comfortable and pleasing surroundings; prompt and courteous attention, together with all'the varieties of good food and confection, prepared by our own efficient chefs and pastry cooks. We will continue to make homemade candies in our own sanitary candy kitchen, under the direction of our own candy When Hungry, Come to the New Sweet Shop Three Doors East from Our Former Location