The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 30, 1930, Page 2

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eeeererrrrerrirere rr tr rors ok. TT) |} Then admirers seized Shatov and ~ ROAD WITH WONDER * Natives Give ‘Daring Exhibition *.* of Horsemanship to For- eigh Correspondents CEREMONIES LIKE RODEO — Planes Overhead, Bands Play Red Tune, Women Treated ‘to First Vanity Glasses Ainabulak, Kazakstan Soviet Re- public, April 30.—(#)—The opening eremonies of the new 1,700-mile Taiiroad now in progress have the color of a gigantic rodeo American far West. :it_was a momentous day in the ‘union and was proclaimed a ; Tens of thousands of mount- Uzbeks, Khargizians and her nomadic tribes of the Kazaki- ‘an plains cheered as William i Shatov, former Chicago anarchist and section hand on the Erie rail- road, Monday drove the spikes con- , necting the north and south sections » of thé first sovict-built railroad. Builder Is Decorated While red army airplanes circled overhead in the scorching noonday sun, Comrade Isaev, president of the Kazakistan republic, conferred the Bika of the Toiling Red Banner” pon Shatov, who was the leading i soviet executive in construction of « the road. fl ae bore him on their shoulders before heering thousands, the band mean- hile playing Red Internationale. The Amercian and foreign corre- } spondents who arrived Monday were + most interested in the wandering y tribesmen. These: nomads and their = families came from miles around on horseback and camel, by bullock, by van and afoot, and after the railroad dedication gave a thrilling exhibition of their daring horsemanship. ‘The native Kazaks, who are almost wholly illiterate, appeared to view the invasion of their silent, mysterious wastes by a railroad with mingled awe and suspicion, for the camel and the“‘horse have provided transporta- tion in their almost limitless terri- tory heretofore. * Seciety Girl Thrills Natives The native. women and girls were give a thrill by. Miss Mary Van Rens- salaer Cogswell. NeW York socicry girl, who represented a New York news- paper here, Miss Cogswell gave them | wanity cases with ‘gmall mirrors. It was the first time the native women had seen their images re- flected from mirrors and at firet they appeared to be frightened, but later they were so pleased at their reflec- tions they spread the news through town that a “miracle” had happened. The correspondents traveled 3,000 miles as guests of the soviet govern- ment to witness the dedication. Kazakstan, the largest autonomous republic within the soviet union, is transformed from virtually a barren weste into a region of great potential | economic significance by the new) railroad. The line connects the pres- ent Central Asia road at Aris, Uzbeki- stan, with the great Trans-Siberian railway at Novosibirsk. Of the 1.700 miles length, 1,000 miles represents tion. The-first portion stan with the great wheat-producing areas of Siberia. It also opens the vast lumber resources of Siberia to Guest Rides Subject And Damages Denied ‘When a man accepts an invitation to ride in another's automobile he Bite g old ? ail sit Reasonable Hazards |, —7 | BY EARLY DROUTH; SERDING IS SPEEDED srs a “Well, it can go another summer without new rigging just as well as your wife can.” THE sonar TRIBUN. , WEDNESDAY, ‘APRIL 30, 1980 northeastern North Dakota, there is & deficiency of sul generally Deficiency ef Moisture Reported | moisture in the spring wheat in Most of the Spring Grain Area is sufficient moisture, Grilling even in the extreme | weeks yet before reliable statistics on Sealed he northern areas and under favorable; curtailment of acreage will have been check, vt Ex Pate. rea cube bated’ bt BATTLE OF DEAD MEN IS DECIDED BY COURT Administrators Carried on Legal Feud Over Removal of Doctor's Sign A fight which raged between two men now dead has been settled by the state supreme court. The title of the case, as reviewed by the court, was Erling Pratou, as ad- ministrator of the estate of the late L. 8. Platou, vs. John Swanton, as administrator of the estate of the late As presented to the court, Dr. Platou had offices, under lease, in a building which Parker wished to remodel for use as a hotel in Fargo. Parker took down Dr. Platou’s sign and, it was charged, otherwise inconvenienced him and embarrassed his practics as a physician by cluttering up the en- tryway to the building with repair material. A Cass county district court jury thought enough of the claim to award Dr. Platou $600 damages. Parker appealed to the supreme court, and then both litigants died. Their administrators carried on the battle. In deciding that the district court erred and that Dr. Platou was not en- titled to damages, the supreme court held that “substantial damages may not be recovered for the removal of an advertising sign where the plaintiff shows no right to maintain it other than as licensee under a revocable State’s Naval Relic Turned to Annoyance By Raps of Visitors Possession of a new and interesting curio by the state historical museum already had possession of the ship's silver service and the emblem on its prow. The bell was added recently and 4s an outstanding sauce to the ob- Jects in the state m trouble lies in the the fact that it ff }county court, and the state bonding iOf the records of the county clerk’s Checking Dead Man’s Records to Locate Discrepancy Source William Murray, judge of the Ward department are making a close check office in an effort to avold pressing a ee ee ere ‘The man is R. E. Hopisins, clerk to Murray for many years, who died last December 20. Recently Murray found a check for $75, given by Leo Ackerman of Ken- mare as bond in a case in whieh Ackerman was a defendant, haa been cashed and the money never was re- turned to Ackerman when the case was dismissed. A preilminary check also showed a discrépancy of $10 in: the fee records of the clerk's olfice. | If no adequate explanation is found | for the apparent disappearance of! the money, it is probable that a fe mal claim will be presented to state bonding fund waica wrote ‘Auv- kin’s bond, according to F. E. Tunell, bonding fund manager. BAD DEBTS LOSSES SMALL INN, DAKOTA Federal Investigator Finds Con- siderable Percentage of Cash Sales Minneapolis, April 30.—(7)—A percentage of losses from bad in North Dakota and other Northwest states is experienced stores compared with other. of the United States, according to & survey conducted by E. M. Zwickel, manager of the northwest district of- fice of the United States Departatent of Commerce. Zwickel said that information re- received from stores reporting in the Dakotas, Minnesota and Montene show 49.9 per cent on open. crédit and installment credit. gE ute: radi ee io i eB He aPgEE ae 3 uk ak #8 it J 3 oe a8 Ha He H | : Ul aE Ae EEE eis Ry EL : rt he W: ae da a atte wei aaa oe ig Phillips’ . % ‘Northwest is assurred. tar Ved te Boa: “For more than a‘month weather gore ‘Special Schoo! Distri the Southwest |conditions largely will govern the|}. Burleigh Counts, Nort ed the drouth/trend of quotations as crop scares really know your cigarette? YOU'RE PARTICULAR about the other things that are so intimate a pest hundred grades of leaf tobacco. What kind of cigarette do you smoke? thé famous Camel blend is based on the use of tobaccos of superlative quality. It is only from them that you can. expect that sinooth, rich, mellow mildness and that fregrance and-aromia found ia'such perfec: tion in Camels. ‘We buy the right tobaccos . . . the very choicest delicate lesves of Turkish aad Domestic. In their caring afd pecparition we wie the _ See sal ik wile ean. Bad we slans patie ha kat That’ why Camel i abl oral stl cigar’ plbaare i tae a t ‘ ‘ “4 @. ’ Ce in LG ¥ « ja € ” 2 i

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