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Li }) p> b FORMER BANKER'S DEATHS GAUSE OF INVESTIGATION : Family and Insurance Firm Dis- satisfied with Accident Ver- dict; Body Exhumed Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 8.—(P)— Dissatisfied with the verdict oka pas oner’s jury that he died -of “burns and suffocation,” relatives and life insurance officials have instituted an investigation into the death of J. E. Arnot, real estate dealer and for- mer banker of Glasgow, Mont., who was born at Grand Forks 50 years ago. Investigation was started Saturday when Mr. Arnot’s body was exhumed at Park River, his former home, remains was per- formed by Dr. G. W. Glaspel of Graf- ton and Dr. H-E. French of the Uni- versity school of medicine here, but nothing definite could be détermined as the body was in a bad state of de- composition, doctors said. Sections of the organs were brought to Grand Forks for chemical analysis in the university laboratories. This will take considerable time, actording to Dr. French. OO CITIES ARE ON AIR TOUR SCHEDULE Flight to Start September 11 Will Visit Grand Forks and Canadian Towns Detroit, Mich., Sept. 8—(?)—Thirty cities in the United States and Can- ada will see the 30 ships comprising the sixth annual national air tour, which will take off from the Ford air- port near here Thursday for a 17-day, 5,200 mile flight most of it over terri- tory heretofore not covered by the » N. D., is included among the cities to be visited by the air tourists. The ships are sched- uled to land there at noon September 14. Later in the day the air tourists will take off for Winnipeg, Man., where they will remain fo- the evening. Upwards of 20 ships will be com- peting for the Edsel B. Ford reliabil> ity trophy, the Great Lakes light plane trophy and the $14,000 in prize money offered to planes making the most praiseworthy performances. The others will be demonstrative planes, including one equipped with the Diesel oil burning engine, service ships sent along by competing airplane com- panies, and official planes connected with the tour. A complicated system of scoring has been devised this year to determine winners of the tour on @ basis of ac- tual reliability and flexibility in 0} ation, as well as speed, involved. Fac- tors making up the scoring formula are: Useful loads, of the difference between gross loads and empty weight; rated horsepower, the time required to bring the ship to a stop upon landing, the, time required to take off and the miles per hour aver- aged on each leg. Extra credit is given cabin or amphibian ships, of which a dozen have been entered. ‘This year’s itinerary roughly com- prises a circle with Edmonton, Alta., in the Canadian northwest as the point farthest north. Denver marks the western extremity and Cincin- nati the farthest point south. The Ford airport is the starting and fin- ishing point. The Edsel B. Ford trophy is award- ed each year to the tour winner. The Great Lakes trophy is for the highest scoring light plane, with 510 cubic inch engine displacement as the max- im to $400, while each other competing plane finishing the tour will earn a bonus of $200. Among this year’s entrants are the 1929 winners John Livingston of Aurora, Ill., and Arthur J. Davis of East Lansing, Mich., who then com- Petes as a team, but this year entered singly. Capt. Ray Collins is tour manager. Capt. Frank Hawks is referee and E. 'W. Cleveland is official starter. The itinerary is: Kalamazoo, Chicago, Sept. 11, night; Towa, Sept. 12, noon; Wausau, Wis., Sept. 12, night; Eau Claire, Wis., Sept. 13, noon; Duluth, Minn. Sept. 13, night; Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 14; Winnipeg, Man., Sept 14, night; Brandon, Man., Sept. 15, noon; Regina, Sask., Sept. 15, nae ee Battleford, monton, Alta., Sept. 17 night; Calgary, Alta., Sept. 18, all day; Lethbridge, Alta., Sept. 19, noon; Great Falls, Mont., Sept. 19, night; SMeridan, ‘Wyo., Sept. 20, noon; Casper, Wyo., Sept. 20, night; Cheyenne, Wyo., see 23,| ates, which they reverently added to New York Gangster Is Homeward Bound WOMAN ARTIST DIES Stamford, Gonn., Sept. 8.—(AP)— Rhoda Holmes Nicholls, noted artist of many implements water color painters, died her ed yesterday. She was 76 Children Compete at Rifle Meet | 1 \ Marksmanship knows neither sex nor age, and here you see youthful sharp- shooters on the firing line at Camp Perry, ©., scene of national rifle and pistol matches. Arlayne Brown, 14-year-old St. Louis girl, who has won 19! medals in competition with foremost adult shots of America, is shown above, sighting her pistol, while in the inset is a group of other ‘children taking part in the junior rifle matches, HOLY HOUSE OF NAZARETH ATTRACTS ITALY’S sopeume i irai f |Cattleman Wins [ h Anniversary of Virgin’s Birt i it — Celebrated by Solemn Pro- aaa cession at,Loreto | Winning a race with death when he | arrived here by airplane in less than | be hours ie Sereda ‘Wash., Ro- , bert French,” 30-year-old cattleman, MANY AVIATORS IN LINE, nen ea treatment at a local hospital —— 1 lay. French, ill from a serious malady, came in an airship equipped with a bed and suffered no ill effects: from the long trip, which was his first in |@ plane. Accompanying him were Mrs. French and Dr. T. J. McCain of Omak, Wash. Loreto, Italy, Sept. 8—/)—All day! Frank Kammer, Wenatchee aviator, today through the main street, of this | piloted the plane. pictur jue/little town, poised on the eights with the green Adriatic be-| ITALY FEELS NEW QUAKE low, passed @ procession to the sanc-| Candela, Foggia, Italy,, Sept. 8. tuary of the “Holy House of Nazar- (AP)—A strong eathshock of si etl also known .as the “Flying | seconds duration was felt a few min- House,” to celebrate the nativity of|utes before midnight. No damage the Blessed Virgin. | years the great and lonely; from kings | the July quake were endangered and crusaders to beggars, have trod 4new. to this shrine, bearing | REE igh oS ined ar 3 INQUEST PLANNED The procession today included a| Owatonna, Minn., Sept. 8—(P)— number of aviators, for “Our Lady of An inquest over the body of a man Loreto” was proclaimed their protec- | believed to have been a member of a tress by the late Pope Benedict XV; | Sang which robbed the Bank of Will- American touring motorists and their) mar July 15 of $142,000 was to be Legend Has It House Was Mir- aculously Transported From Holy Land to Escape Turks ‘ Rochester, Minn., Sept. 8—(P)}—| X!a view to establishing a Democratic For over 800| Was caused but housese weakened by |, STANDARD OIL MEN GET SERVICE PINS|* Three Attaches of Bismarck Of- fice Honored for Ten Years With Company Three Standard Oil veterans in this city have been awarded 10-year serv- ice pins by the company. They are Glen L. Smith, field salesman here, George Schubert, warehouseman, and Joseph Schneider, service station at- tendant. ~- The presentations to. Smith and Schubert ware made at the company ce ny Front avenue this aged y .- Johnson, representing R. H. district ‘. ig ee presented-. Schneider pin. ntation went’ service ‘effect that Smith was until 1918, when he entered the U. 8. army. His ‘first’ service ‘with the Standard Oil of Indiana’ was as ship- ping clerk at Fargo on July 20, 1920. He was transferred to warehouse clerk at Grand Forks and then was beet field salesman out of the local oe, : Schubert was born at Dowdle, S. D., December 19, 1891, and entered the service of the Standar:. Aprit 13, 1920 as @ general laborer, later filling sev- eral ‘other positions, until he became warehouseman here March 1, 1930. Schneider was born in Russia, May 21, 1874, He arrived in the United States May 26, 1899, and engaged in the grocery business‘here five years. On April 19, 1920 h: entered the serv- ice of the Standard Oil of Indiana, Fargo division, as general laborer and was made service station attendant May 24, 1920. Except for a brief pe-; riod he has held that position ever since. Paralysis Victim _ Is Near Recovery| ‘Tromsburg, Neb., Sent. 8—(P)—Aft- | era month of existence with the| help of artificial respiration, Miss | Anita Hollister, 26, was believed by | Dr. C. L. Anderson today to be mak- | ing progress towards recovery. A victim of infantile paralysis, Miss Hollister was unable at first to breathe without aid. Relatives and) nurses were at her bedside constant-,| ly. Two weeks later she could bfeathe | alone for a few minutes at a time. With one relapse, she has improved since then. She can now move her hand® slightly Dr. Anderson. the attending phy- sician, said today this is the only case he knows in which an infantile paralysis victim, paralyzed from the neck down, has lived. Congressmen to Study Conditions in Samoa Washington, Sept. 8—/P)—The jislands in the south seas that form American Samoa, are to be studied by a congressional commission. with government for the 10,000 true Poly- nesians who dwell there. The commission also will have three Samoan chiefs as members. Senator Bingham. of Connecticut, | who instituted the move, is chairman jof the group. American Samoa has been govern- ed for three decades under a practi- department. Senator Bingham’s families, and peasants clad in the held today. Coroner O. F. Degroat vivid costumes of the Abruzzi and the | Of Steele county was to preside. The Marches. Many came into town on! body was found near here, August 30. foot, priests, students, old men and) - women, grandmothers leading broods |. of grandchildren and mothers carry- ing their latest born in baskets bal- anced on their heads. To the chant of litanies they all wound through the principal street | Visit of the annunciation, and where ; |date. When Nazareth was threatened into the Piazza of the Madonna. One heard on every side the cries: “Viva Maria” (“Long live the Ma- donna!”) taken up and repeated both | solemnly and joyfully. The “Holy House of Nazareth,” ac- cording to legend, was hte very one in which the Blessed Virgin was born and reared, where she received the she resided after Christ’s ascention. The apostles are supposed to have converted it into a church at a later by the Turks the legend has it that the house was borne miraculously through the air to a hill near Scutari. Later, when thieves and pirates in- fested the region, it is said, trans- ported the house to the hill of Loreto and\set it down among the laurel groves, It is a tiny house, but encased by lofty marble screens. The four screens represent the annunctation. the nativity of Christ, the arrival of the Holy House at Loreto, and the nativity of the Blessed Virgin her- self. Inside is a-small statue of the Madonna and child, carved in black ‘wood of lebanon, and supposed to have been the work of St. Luke, the comer was baptized born in 1927, is Princess Josephine Charlotte. Stuyvenberg Castle, around which keep away the curious with the boom nouncing birth of ¢rowd surrounded the castle to cheer the Prince and his family. » 8 Stiffler, 43, St. Paul, in charge 0 1e clinic and vice president of the Min- nesota Conference of Social Work, died suddenly while visiting in Min- neapolis, 4 artist of the four evangelists. All the pilgrims today carried can- thousands already burning by the famous shrine. ‘ f Belgian Prince | Of Blood Is Born | ° Brussels, Sept. 8—(AP)—Belgium rejoiced today in the birth of a new prince of the blood and heir in the direct male line to:the throne. Z Princess Astrid of Sweden, wife of Crown Prince Leopold, bearing her second child yesterday, gave the country a nine-pound boy. The new- junday night with the name Badouin Albert Axel Gustave. The first child of the royal pair, boy was born at wire had been stretched to ing of a salute of 101 guns an- a boy and heir, a ST. PAUL PHYSICIAN DIES Minneapolis, Sept. 8.—(AP)—Dr. St. Paul- Child Guidance hopes to draft an organic law similar | i commission | quickly allay these conditions, | pital. [ Boop-a-Doop Girl | On Stand “He said a little girl like me should not fool around with the stock mar- ket, he did”... . That's what Helen Kane, stage and screen star of “boop- boop-a-doop” fame, had to say when, as shown above, she appeared at the bankruptcy hearing of the Bond Dress company in New York. She testified that the $50,000 which Mur- Yay Posner, a partner in the firm, had paid her just before the empany failed was in return for money she previously had given him to buy Lib- erty bonds. Creditors, contending that the baby-talking actress was paid out of the company’s funds, are seeking recovery of the sum. TO GET HUGE SALARY Paris, Sept. 8—(?)—Maurice Chev- valier, stage and talkie star,’ is to make $20,000 a week. A theatre has engaged him at that figure for two weeks in November. AUTO DEATH TOLL MOUNTS Minneapolis, Sept. 8.—(?)—Minne- apolis’ auto death toll mounted today when Sam. Carlson, injured in a crash last week, died at General Hos- His death was the 53rd fatal- ity of the year here. Backache If Getting Up Nights, Backache. frequent day calls, Leg Pains, Nerv- ousness, or Burning, due to function- al Bladder Irritation, in acid condi- tions, makes you feel tired, depressed and discouraged, try the Cystex Test. Works fast, starts circulating through the system in 15 minutes. Praised action. Don’t give up. Try Cystex cal autocracy set up whder the navy! (pronounced Siss-tex) today, under {the Iron-Clad Guarantee. “fe im- or |to that under which the territory | money back. Only 60c at Hall's Drug | of Hawaii is functioning. more than vantageous prices. Bismarck, North Dakota New Autumn Garments ~ Coats - Dresses - Millinery In the Bismarck Cloak Shop there are new and fascinating styles adapted to the various occasions of Fall and Winter. They offer fashions so varied that they provide appropriate costumes for every hour of the day—individual styles for morning, afternoon, evening and night. Every question of sleeve, neckline and style details is an- swered in this comprehensive collection. Coats that are definitely of the new mode. You will be delighted at their fine velvety-look- ing materials—their elaborate fur-trimming and their exquisite tailoring. If you want an unusually individual coat, you need not pay $245,550 FUR COATS We feature an extraordinary selection of “fine fur coats. By making your selection early it is possible to secure the best of pelts at ad- $149.00~- Bismarck Cloak Shop The Popular Priced Store Prove restful sleep and energy, | Store.—Adv. length, silhouette, Leg Pains { by thousands for rapid and positive, | SYNTHETIC CHEWING GUM IS MADE BY ALABAMA CHEMIST} Cincinnati, O., Sept. 8—(>)—Syn-| thetic chewing gum, made by adding & dash of wartime chlorine to a new substance produced from benzene, one of chemistry’s latest marvels. The new chew is described in a re- port made public by the American Chemical society at its meeting which began here today. rt It substitutes for chicle and, like the natural products, is tastless and odorless Experiments with it are in- complete and not in the commercial stages for gum. But indicate that as ; chew it would have a medicinal ef-/ fect. The gum is an incidental discovery and has a score of new commercial Possibilities, some already in prac- tice, all coming from this same new chemical, diphenyl. These commer- cial uses are reported in a technical Paper by Chester H. Penning, of the commercial research department of Swann Research, Inc., of Anniston, Alabama. Diphenyl is a milky colored solid’! made by uniting two benzene mole- cules, which thereupon become so dif- ferent in character that instead of being explosive they are a substitute for steam for carrying heat. It was demand of gasolime refining for this heat ing property that recently brought diphenyl into existence in quantity. All the new substances reported to- | day are obtained simply by adding to| diphenyl various amounts of chlorine which, besides being a gas, is familiar in the flavor of table salt. Adding 19 per cent by weight of chlorine makes a clear substance re- sembling water. More chlorine suc- jcessively produces light oils, thick {8 syrup substances and finally a light amber colored solid. All of these are virtually odorless and tasteless, Mr. Penning says, ex- cept one which has’a distinctive but not unpleasant smell. Their con- centrated vapors irritate the nasal passages and give some persons head- aches, but no poisonous effects have been found. Mr. Penning says it appears possible to use them both for making flame- proof and waterproof garments. They make wood “virtually fireproof” and add to its strength, but he says are more expensive for wood fireproofing than mineral salt processes. . PROTECTION ASKED Surrey, N. D., Sept. 8—()—A peti- t Railway company tp install a warn- Feen-a-mint is the answer. Cleansing action of smaller doses effective because you chewit. At your druggists— the safe and scientific laxative. Diamonds, Watches On Credit aumercscoac” || FOR CONSTIPATION We Invite You to Attend An experienced Benjamin Moore & Co. | ‘Decorator Will Be at This Store Today and Tuesday September 8 and 9 French & Welch Bismarck, North Dakota Agents for Benjamin Moore & Co.’s Products An experienced decorator well-schooled in color harmony will be on hand to discuss problems of decoration with you. Attention will be centered upon Furniture, Floors, Walls and UTILAC first. unlimited and the choice of your home. ‘|FREE! and receive One 25c brush 65c Value for NOME. oc osincdyscrnedocs’s Address .. seed, who wish to hold for a later B direc! tion requesting the Great Northern | Havin Nati ing signal at a Crossing over its | ciati early and later deliv. the discussion and densqnataa sion of UTILAC for im. UTILAC the original 4 hour drying enamel. UTILAC is easy to apply, it does not show brush marks and it is without offensive odor. Whether it is the renovation of old, or the paint- ing of new Furniture, Walls or Trim investigate The uses of this product are almost One 40c can of Utilac This Coupon is-good Sept. 8 and 9 only on to N. W. SEED GROWERS ASS’N. 206 lith St. No., Fargo, N. | FEEDER LAMBS uy your feeder lam in Livestock Marketi»: "an organization of nal Livestock Marketin; m. We offer for sale the following: 4500 Blackface and 3000 White- face lambs for delivery first half September, weigh about 65 to 68 pounds. 36,500 Whiteface and 12,600 Blackface lambs for delivery ‘the last part of September or the firat ten days in October, will weigh 60 to 65 pounds. We have heavier 1500 Whitefce lambs weighing aboilt 55 to 60 pounds for delivers last September. 2000 good ewes. Make choice feeding ewes or good for one lamb crop. These lambs and ewes are for sale in one or more carloads. Financial assistance can be give: to experienced and responsible feeders at dow rates of interest. Write or wire your requirements, H. F. PATTERSON Co. Bilin, Capital Funeral Parlors 208 Main Avenue Licensed Embalmer Phone—Day or Night—22 Jos. W. Tschumperlin Prop. colors is wide. Use UTILAC to bring a touch of color to every room in Stop at This Store Dur- ing the Demonstration An Excellent Opportunity To obtain expert advice on all interior - decorating. At no cost to you. Bring some small article and decorate it ‘with UTILAC yourself. THIS COUPON IS WORTH 40c Sign your name and bring this coupon to our store 25¢ Pee e eee ee ee eece ane Friday. The petition filed by the Surrey towhalip board, growers market. and ewes t from the grower on the range. 1, We are the sales agent for the In- termor wers the approval of the Federal ‘arm Board ‘and affiliated with the Asso. mbs, also for n , Montana. —e—_—_——— — — —