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THE Sect sou 725| PLANET ‘X’ ISLARGE AS EARTH; _|INTRASTAT CIRCLES SUN EVERY 3,200 YEARS Tecate 3 New Salem Breeder SAYS FAY HARDING Four State Nurses Sells Prized Calf to Minnesota Herd Man N " er Go to National Meet That are Li Fi 1 om rnighonnen ee ypioreant ‘rom sie tha ‘At Mil Jane recently demonstrated when Lonze L. Nolton, of Granite Falls, Minn., made BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, APRIL’ 24, 1980. ; st I E Mandan and Stanton Snatch _- Most of Honors in District eee amie Joe Brucker Leaps [Fee of Frying Pan ! i Into Mandan’s Fire | re Out of the frying pan into the fire was the fate in Mandan yesterday of “Hollywood Joe” Brucker, dan youth. : Brucker, arrested for taking an au- | Hazen and Almont Also Win| ‘omobile without the owner's permis- sion and found guilty by Charles M. Second and Third Prizes hres justice of the peace, was in ¢ Morton county jail yesterday in in Three Branches leu of $10 fine soa costs until & friend paid the charges and he was Mandan high school, with seven | Teleased late yesterday. first places and five seconds, won aj But Brucker was out of jail for only “ ity of the honors in the ninth | short time. He was brought to the svg m music, declamation, and com-|Mandan city jail late last night mercial contests held at Bismarck | Charged with assault and battery. He ‘and Mandan yesterday afternoon and | Was to have a hearing before Justice » evening. x Sheen on the second charge at 4 ‘Mandan won three firsts and two | 0’clock this afternoon. ds in music, two firsts and a sec-| The youth is charged with assault ond in declamation, and two firsts/ nd battery against Mrs, Paul John- and two seconds in typing. son in the White Star cafe following Stanton, scoring four firsts in| &M argument last night. The hearing * music, was second. Hazen, with a| W&S postponed from this morning to in music and a first and second | this afternoon that witnesses might , A Mpedl and Almont, with a| be available, Justice Sheen said. Recently Discovered Solar Body state railroad board from Described in Layman’s Lan- guage for First Time 8 ii i E i i ik i A g F i f FROM MANDAN FAIR $29,075 Acked for Alleged In- juries Received by Indians From Race Car 1 : Morton County City Wins Seven Firsts and Five Seconds Yesterday “STANTON WINS 4 EVENTS EE | i$ NOT COMET OR ASTEROID / i i I HE {Most Distant Object Ever Ob- served in Astronomical Sys- tem Excepting Stars 5 EF i ; z I 5 a | pin i i Hi i sviEE i E ? i 3 Damage suits totaling $29,075 have been filed against the Missouri Slope Fair association by five Indians, al- leged to have been injured by a rac- ing car at the fair last July 25, The plaintiffs are Mrs. Henry Conica, 25, and her two children, Marceline, 3, and Sylvester, 6; Charles, 9, son of Charles Dunn; and oa 7, daughter of John Brave ull, They are alleged to have received Permanent injuries when an automo- bile, driven by George Baumgartner, Fargo, left the track and crashed in- to a tepee in the Indain village near the track. : Defendants named are Allen Pfen- ning, secretary of the Fair associa- tion Governor George F. Shafer, At- torney General James Morris and Secretary of Agriculture and Labor B 8 F j 5 i f gE il Fi 4 F FE H j I aH i | ; i F j E [ ) | i i r f i | Bi I é g i | i apele age z i see | i 1 jit fh i i ref & ipe vie i Lf Ys < 3 ent of Science, lere are the chief known facts con- j ; i /, dan, second in declamation, were the oth- er schools represented. ' The music contests were held at Bismarck, with Prof. Hywel C, Row- lJand,"head of the music department at the University of North Dakota, the judge. The declamation and com- mercial contests were conducted at Mandan. Winners will compete in the state meet next month. ‘The results of yesterday's contests follow: rolo—iitida Rohrer, Stan- ton tirets LaVonne Penhale, Mandan, second. Contralto—Ann Boepple, Stanton, first; Helen Larson, Mandan, second. Tenor—Thilmore Thorson, Hazen, Baritone — Nestor Sailor, Stanton, "Plano—Jayne Broderick, Mandan, first. Brass instrument solo—Vernon Pav- i . first. alee lee club (division A)—Man- glee club (division B)—Stan- | ton, first. Declamation Girls’ reading — Dorothy - Rosen, Mandan, first; Majorie Nelson, Al- mont, second. Bo; ading—Francis Ford, Man- Clifford Thorson, Hazen, second. Boys’ oratory—Clement Albers, Ha- zen, first; Francis Hoffman, Mandan, second. 3 37.66. Stewart, first, 60.86 words per min- fnard Hess, Mandan, second, Paint Bids Considered, Paving Districts Created, Reso- lution Passed Mandan city commissioners worked regular weekly meeting last almost Ey and $2 lor red Products company, Cleveland, 92.66 for yellow and $2.75 for red; J. I. Rovig Hardward company, Mandan, $2.40 for yellow and $2.45 for red; J. A. Shaw, Mandan, representing the Adams Paint company, Cleveland, O., $2.35 for yellow and $2.65 for red; Ordinances creating paving districts No. 16 and.17 were passed, each dis- trict being for a block of alley paving. BONE-DRY’ LAWYER FORMER MANDANITE Letter From Minot Man on-Pro- hibition Published by Lit. erary Digest The “bone-dry attorney” from Mi- not, N. D., whose letter regarding Prohibition is printed in the April 26 issue of the Literary Digest in con- nection .with. the nationa] pol} the magazine is conducting, is a former, resident of Mandan. He is Corbin E. Waldron. Many friends recalled him yesterday and today as news of the publication of the letter became widespread in the Morton county city. One of Mr. Waldron’s most catch- ing phrases, which is emphasized by the publication, is “All of the liquor from here to hell and back isn't worth the price of one of my mother’s ‘Waldron, in his letter, subscribes himself “unequivocally, whole-heart- edly, and as a heated partizan to the cause of prohibition” because he has seen the steady and sure increase of individual welfare as a result of its innovation; has watched the spread of home-ownership amongst a class that one owned nothing but individ- ual beer-buckets and cases of emp- ties; has seen the material welfare of one nation, its industry and com- merce outstrip all other largely be- cause of its sobriety in enterprise; be- | eves that, in spite of the unfair, un- |Sportsmanlike raillery, mockery, in- sinuation, and ill-timed slurring by the press in general of the constitu- tional innovation, the progress of a temperate nation can still be marked; and because all of the liquor from Minot to hell and back isn’t worth the price of one of his mother's tears. Degrees Exemplified For Five Candidates this At York Rite Program Degrees were exemplified for five candidates during the two-day an- nual York Rite festival at the Ma- sonic temple, Mandan, which closed last evening. The candidates were E. W. Davis Lowell E. Collis, Mandan, for the Twin City Council, and Cc 3 Rev. Frederic G. Nor- ris, Mandan, for the Chapter; and 1 | Charles G. Hughes, Mandan, for the Commandery. ‘The program was closed last even- ing with exemplification of the Com- mandery degrees. ‘HH. W. Wilson, New Rockford, acting Class Play Tomorrow Joseph A. Kitchen. The state appro- Priates money for the fair and the state officials are ex-officio members of the fair board. 8 DISTRICTS SHOW POPULATION DROP 157 Districts and City of Dick- inson Gain 2,387 Resi- dents in Decade A gain in population of 2,367 in the Tast decade is shown by 167 census districts and the city of Dickinson in Dakota, according to figures re- Mandan, district supervisor. The 187 districts and the city of Dickinson had an aggregate popula- tion of 37,787 in 1920 compared with 40,174 this year. Thirteen other dis- tricts, in which 1920 figures are not available and comparisons are im- possible, reported an aggregate pop- ulation this year of 5,397. Eight districts in five counties were reported by Mr. Higgins today. this group showing an aggregate loss of 27 residents during the last 10 years. Today's figures follow: Adams County— Farms 1930 ~1920 + 355 100 169 60 119 142 146 82 81 322 178 166 123 63 59 . 308 Mandan High School Might Stage Track, Field Affair Friday Probability that the annual Man- dan high school inter-class track and Gould sald, school will be dismissed in the afternoon. Both the girls will take part in events, The track men, all but whom are inexperienced, hay working out regularly under - rection of Athletic Director Leonard C. McMahan. Half Million Trees Sent from Mandan’s Plains Field station, Mandan, to dem- onstrators in North and South Da- kota, Montana and Wyoming in the last 10 days. «| Thousands of Pike Orbit—Elliptical, its plane inclined to that of the other major planets at about 31 degrees, 31 minutes. of diametér Fingerlings Being from the Hatched at Lisbon|,.7™" = J. Lisbon, N. D., April 23.—()—Thou- sands of wall-eyed and northern pike finger! ti ‘lings should be produced this year at the state fish hatchery here, according bac to Burnie Maurék, state game and fish commissioner. Nets have been spread in the Shey- »;enne river to trap fish moving up- the southwestern section of North! referring leased so far by Milton K. Higgins, | vin Abandon Oregon Line Washington, April 24.—()—Per- mission for the Southern Pacific com- pany to abandon parts of its lire in We ‘amhill and Multnomah counties, Oregon, was given today by commerce commission. interstate fed crerboyrerngicenetoap ienynpren stream, The eggs are taken from these and hatched and the state will watch over the “crop” until the. fish reach the fingerling stage. They then will be liberated in North Da- arrangems deliver the fish in good condition, Maurek said, a number will be plant- ed in the Cannonball river, above the dam which was built last year at New England. The department also expects to have some bass fingerlings which are to be seined from the river here, Oil Freight Rates.Are Attacked Before I. C. C. and were the subject of a hearing today before Examiner Paul O. Carter for th> Interstate Commerce n, The chief complainants, the Wyom- ing Public Service commission, the Nebraska State Railway commission and the Standard Oil company, main- | tain the rates are too high in com- Parison to Points in Kansas, Oklahoma and rates from Wyoming to the mid-continent field, Texas. Varicose Veins! Simple Home Treatment Quickly Reduces These Swollen Unsightly Veins or Money Back. Are you one of those unfortunate ‘women who read admiration in every- U. S. Field Station | even disgust Get a 2-ounce bottle of Emerald Oil BIG ASSORTMENT OF GOOD USED TIRES CHEAP We haves big sieortment of used tires to choose from at very low joo! ‘over. ‘e also give food's allowances on your old tires in trade for new ones. : Heb tay 82, 3 58, 60, 62, and 70 . 9 A&M to know as much about the case as| attorneys. “When he announced a recess for certain points explained after the re- cess. “Mr. Hagman stuck gamely to his guns when the case was resumed, but he found it difficult to answer ques- tions from the bench. Finally the ments can be made to|chief GREAT VITAMIN STRENGTH FATHER JOHNS MEDICINE PURE NOURISHMENT a jets iy E air Ub SEE RFs FEEaE ik Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing, Repairing, Re- modeling Pleating Done in the \ Right Way : by the MASTER CLEANERS and DYERS, INC. Work Done in Our Own Cleaning Plant ‘311 Main Avenues We Call fer and Deliver Phone 664 John Deere General Purpose Tractor Pulls Two Bottoms with Two Wheels in the F . Straight Center Hitch for Both Plow ond Tractor straight center hitch, side draft é