The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 29, 1930, Page 7

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REFUNDS AND GIFTS 106.0. , TREASURY Democratic Leader Thinks Re- turn of $100,000,000 to Donors Is Suspicious | Washington, Sept. 29.—(#)—Size- able contributions to the 1930 Re- publican campaign fund were linked with tax refunds of more than $100,- ADMITTED BY COURT Four Applications _ Continued | and One Failed to Appear; McFarland Advises Them Seven new citizens were placed on the roll today in a naturalization court conducted by Judge R. G. \Mc- Farland in the district court room SEVENNEW CITIZENS ‘SUGGEST ALFONSO market hedging and not gambling when the seller had actual cash grain | it could supply. Russia has already bought back some of the wheat, Badenoch said. He told the committee he knew of ; between 400,000 and 500.000 bushels ‘having been bought. Badenoch said LEAVE HIS THRONE Republicans. of Spain of Spain Launch Movement to End Mon- archy in Country been made on the transaction, Badenoch said he knew of no way to stop sales by individuals, but that if he knew the individual represented | the Russian government he would not have been in favor of permitting the Madrid, Sept. €9.—(#)—Republicans | saie, of Spain were roused today to great- er efforts to end the monarchy as fiery appeals of their leaders here | he did not know how much profit had | GOLF ADVENTURES OF JONES ENDED Emperor of Links Returns to Atlanta but No Organized Welcome Is Given Him Atlanta, Ga., Sept. 29.—(7—The Breatest trial of golfing adventures the world has ever known, which be- Sracraar ey yee Yegg Gets $1 After | Yess |, Cracking 11 Safes | Denver, Colo,, Sept. 29.—#)—An yegg, going in for quantity optimistic pee ee The revard for hls Sgt of ingue Canadise try was $1—counting two quarters, Name Umpires for Baseball Classic this morning. Those winning this privilege were: Hildor Egil Hermanson, native of Norway, high school principal at Me- Kenzie. Witnesses, Nellie Evarts and Ed Conley. Hugo Joseph Wacker, native of Germany, priest at St. Mary’s Cath- olic church, Bismarck. Witnesses, Rev. Cuthbert Goeb and Rev. Urban Weckworth. Sunday echoed throughout the land. | Twenty thousand persons jammed | an old bull ring in a meeting made Possible only a few days ago with lifting censorship and of a ban on free speech. They heard the chiefs of the movement attack the mon- archy and espouse a republic. i Alejandro Lerroux, leader of the tadical wigg of the Republican party, said Alfonso should be advisea that Carl Skodje, native of Norway, resi- the solution lies “entirely within the Original bar of the noted Crystal Palace, ae ear most famous drink- dent of Bismarck. Witnesses, P. D. King’s hands, and he alone can pre- Kebsgard and Christian Nilson. vent a tragedy.” ‘SEARCH FOR BODIES OF VESSEL'S CREW, Six Believed Dead as Result of, Sinking of Freight Ship in Lake Michigan Grand *Haven, Mich., Sept. 20.—() | gan at @ suburban railroad station here in April, ended this morning at the same little depot as Bobby Jones came home to his friends. Although no official welcoming jProgram had been arranged, hun-| {dreds of friends and admirers ane Brookwood station for aj limpse of Bobby as he stepped off Ithe train. Automobile horns honked, | jtrain whistles blew and_a score of jcameras added their grinding noise to | {Ernest ing and gambling place in the south won and lost and it has been North Dakota, to attend the atin Helldorado celebration to be held in Tombstone, Arizona’s most spectacu- lar mining aad of the hectic 80's tructed | and War-ren ‘Zarp, Bat Masterson, |™An- halls, the click of the roulette hall, the ballyhoo of crap dealers and the hundred and one sounds of rip-roar- ing Tombstone of 1879 to 1885 will echo again on the opening day of this 0 Phe! Helldorado and thousands will ey ive Rental Sans seicetog Gaye when thie we: the jthen {| making. st in the scene early 80's. Fortunes were of many gun tragedies, territory of Arizona was in the ears ago rang almost over- night to a wild camp with a one-time Population of 14,000 following the spectacular strike of Ed Schieffelin, |; whose monument is a miner’s cairn just west of the camp, and the spirits of such famous characters as Sheriff John Behan, Wyatt, Morgan, Virgil Billy Clanton, John Ringo, Doc Hol- liday, “Buckskin” Frank Leslie, Frank ‘Stillwell and countless others who have passed on and whose famous or infamous careers painted the early history of Arizona with vivid color, will hover over the faithful reproduc- tion of the scenes of their activities, MANDAN NEWS “/Two Young Mandan Girls Are Believed Kidnaped -|Mary Jane Taylor, 12, and Lulu Wetch, 15, Missing Since Saturday Authorities of four states today Harvey | joined in @ search for two young By Cultivating Trees ‘Trees supplied to farmers through. out the state by the state forestry to prepare the soil a year in advance to insure better moisture tions freedom from weeds. out they are carefully free of weeds. Gag" SURGE jl ib figs eis? i g i | } p Forks Farmers Hold Mandan girls who are believed to Mandan. Police believed the girls left with Prank Ereth, 22, and another youth from Florida. The party is thought to have headed for Oklahoma. Authorities said charges of kidnap- OF HUNTING MISHAP John Federer Receives Wounds in Left Arm; Condition Not Serious John Ferderer, Manian, toney. wae Lecture Bet Before Lions Father brand, priest at St. He |, Mandan, to: | ana thus becomes a reason for devo- tion to the task of securing perma+ nent peace. His explanation of pres- ‘ent conditions was addressed to 15,000 Persons attending the eastern Idaho fair yesterday. Residents South of Hettinger May Have Telephone Service Hettinger, N. D., Sept. 29.—Resi- dents of the south country expect to have telephone connections with Het- tinger in the near future. E. W. Laisy, postmaster at Gill, D., Chris Sorum, president of the Sorum Community club, and George | Elling, Slim Buttes,S. D.,county com- missioners of Harding county, were in Hettinger this week in the interests of the Sorum Telephone company, through which the people along the route from Hettinger to Newell, 8. D., expect to obtain telephone connec- tions throughout the south country and with Hettinger. Lawyers to Select Place for Meeting Marian Sophie Johnson Erickson, native of Denmark and resident of Bismarck. Witnesses, Mrs. Frank Walbert, Mrs. J. 8. Hanson. Ragnhild Larsen Bergh, native of Norway and resident of McKenzie. Witnesses, Hilda Gustafson and Ella ‘Voge. Even Brodshaug, native of Norway and resident of Bismarck. Witnesses, Christian Nilson, Anton Nileson. Joseph Dechert, native of Germany and resident of Bismarck. Witnesses, eve Burman and Mrs. Heary Bur- John Mike Reis, Russia, did not dopear. ‘The applications: of Jacob Stroh, Pickardville; Jacko Haulzek, Wilton; Harry Hajian, Bismarck, and Nils Alfred Anderson, Bismarck, were continued a year. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Berry on the calendar for the next term of natur- alization court and were mot called ‘today. The questioning of the applicants was conducted by L. L. Welch, St. Paul, assistant district director of naturalization. At the close of the hearing, Charles Fisher, district court clerk administered the oath of citi- zenship to the seven new citizens and Judge McFarland gave them a talk on the meaning of their acceptance into the nation and on the duties which that implies. ‘SIMMONS LEADS IN BATTING CONTEST Philadelphian Held Two-Point Lead Over Gehrig as Season Ended Chicago, Sept. 29.- 29) —-Semiofficial averages today revealed that Al Sim- S.| mons of the Athletics won the 1930 American league batting champion- | ship from Lou Gehrig of the Yankees by two points, one of the closest races in the league's Alcala Zamora,representing the lib- | eral Republicans, said that ‘the king should take account of the present conditions, abdicating before blood | stains” his history. —Coast guards from stations on the jeastern shore of Lake Michigan were searching between Grand Haven and Ludington today for bodies of Capt. Erwin J. Anderson, 24 year old skip- per of the fruit packet North Shore, his 18 year old bride of two weeks and four sailors who went down with their ship during Friday's storm. Capt. W. E. Preston, of the Grand GENERAL STRIKE IS CALLED AT CORUNNA Corunna, Spain, Sept. 29.—(Pi—A general strike was called today io} sympathy with others in Galicia pro-|taven coast guard station, and his testing against severe methods of the | crew returned last night from a cruise police in curbing demonstrations at tot the lake and reported finding part Lugo and Santiago de Compostella| >¢ the bulkhead of the North Shore. against partisans of the Primo de|Capt. Preston said the fruit packet Rivera dictatorship. sank about 30 miles off Racine, Wis. He did not believe there was a chance that any of the six persons on board survived. The North Shore left St. Joseph, Mich., for Milwaukee Friday morning a few hours.before the storm swept Lake Michigan. The packet carried a cargo of 10,000 baskets of grapes and according to schedule, should There were no disturbances. MOBILIZE MONEY T0 HALT CUBAN PANIC | Joseph when the storm broke. Grape baskets were washed ashore on the Michigan side late Saturday and dis- sovery of the North Shore's bulkhead by Capt. Preston indicated definitely that the packet had sunk. Other ships lost in-the storm were the schooner Our Son, last commer- cial sailing vessel on the Great Lakes, and the barge Salvor, which sank off Muskegon with the loss of five lives out of a crew of 14. The crew of the ‘Our Son was taken off safely by the freighter William Nelson. Members of Havana Clearing House Association: Muster $45,000,000 in Cash Havana, Sept. 29.—()—Members of the Havana Clearing House associa- jtion today had $45,000,000 in cash available to protect them from pos- |sible runs growing out of suspension ; Saturday of two of the capital’s largest banks. To aid the beleaguered institutions, — |the federal reserve bank at Atlanta! JURY ACQUITS SLAYER yesterday made shipments of $5,000.- Aitkin, Minn., 1 29.—(P)— 000 and $11,000,000 by airplane and |Bngt A. Salberg, charged with first Cuban gunboat. and a third by a \degree murder for shooting his wife, secret route, of $9,000,000. The bank |was acquitted by a jury here Satur- already had available $20,000,000 in |day. He pleaded temporary insan- {its Havana branch, lity. ‘The first of the shipments arrived | by airplane from Miami; for the sec- | ond, the Cuban gunboat Cuba went to Key West where the gold hart been sent by special train from Atlanta. Federal reserve officials and marines accompanied the shipments. E. R. Black, governor of the At-/ \lanta federal reserve bank, who ac-! companied one of the shipments. said | \the Banco del Comercio, first of the} Diamonds, Watches On Credit James W. Marek LOftice 8: Ho! Bismarck, N. Dak. history. ‘The averages are official up to Sep- tember 21, Fxom September 22.to 28, inclusive, the last week of the season, they were unofficial. ‘This is how the semi-official aver- ages show the finish of the race be- tween the two leading hitters of the league: Games Atbat Hits Pctage Reynolds of the White Sox and Babe Devils Lake, N. D., Sept. 29.—(>)— ‘The place of next year’s convention for the North Dakota Bar associa- tion will be named at a meeting here today of the association's executive committee with Fred J. Traynor of Devils Lake, state president. The executive committee will name committees for the year and will out- line the association’s policies. Mem- bers will be selected for the state ju- dicial council and a ballot taken for member of the state bar board. Wound on Hand Is Cause of Arrest Fargo, N. D., Sept. 29.—)—A cut hand led to the arrest ~Sunday of James Allen and his partner, Carl Mock, alleged to have burglarized the Blanchard Mercantile company early Sunday. ‘Men's overcoats and other clothing were taken from the store. Blood spots were found in the building and on a broken window. Allen was arrested when his in- jured hand attracted attention of of- ficials. All of the stolen goods was recovered. Explorers’ Bodies Copenhagen, Denmark, Sept. 29.— (®)—Remains of Salomon August An- dree, and his two companions in the ful attempt to cross the north pole in a@ balloon in 1897, ar- rived today at Elsinore, Denmar aboard the Swedish gunboat Svens- kund. The ship was greeted by two Danish fisher guardships on which were the premier and minister of de- fense, The guardships will ecort the gun- boat to the Ore Sund and a squadron of aircraft will fly overhead during the trip through the channel. A sa- lute will be fired by Kronborg fort. Funeral Services Held For Benjamin Wheeler Funeral tervices: for Ben, Are En Route Home ° Ruth of the Yankees tied for third place with .359 averages with Mickey Cochrane of the Athletics one point away. Garrison Tinsmith Is Injured in Jump Minot, N. D., Sept. Sept. 29—(#)—Richard Boden, 84-year-old Garrison tinsmith, received a fractured it leg when landing from an exhibi parachu jumps at the airport here Sunday aft- ernoo1 nolan, who is in a local hospital, tt the wind swept him around in anime Position when he was and blamed this for tne in- juries he suffered. He was to have made a jump at Washburn _ next ‘Thursday. In another air stunt Cecil Shupe, local aviator, attempted an unsuc- cessful outside loop with his airplane. Government Sues Great Northern c, | ond dividend of 10 per cent. according to the receiver's office. Payment is being made the district re- ceiver, G. R. Van Sickle, Minot. TO NOMINATE ROOSEVELT Syracuse, N. Y., Sept. 29.—()—The Substitutes Are “ Never Genuine lacking in sub- jamin Wheeler were held at the Webb fu- neral chapel at 2:30 o'clock Sunday afternoon. . Floyd E. Logee of- chard. lot in Fairview cemetery. Hettinger Men Make Air Hop to Mobridge Hettinger, N. D., Sept. 29.—The “West Wind,” Ford tri-motored air- Plane, owned by the Mamer Air Transport company, stopped at Het- tinger Thursday, and stayed over un- til Wednesday noon. George Tripp, D. J. Shults, and A. J. Hancock. busi- ness men of this city, accompanied the plane to Mobridge, its next stop- Ping place. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills containing pure Jos. W. Techumperlin Prop. ite | wheat ready for export than was sold something 1 stitute ite that's always there in original. || banks to close Saturday, would not in the shipment until it had | established credit in New York. The| Banco del Gomerico was a member of | the Clearing House association re-/ cently. The Cordova Banking company, | second of the institutions to close | Saturday, will share in the fund, Black said. Board of Trade Head Is Witness Before Probers (Continued on from page one) went beyond their province in pro- | mulgating such a rule, which he said | could only be enacted by a vote of | the membership. Russia Ready to Sell Badenoch said he Mad been reliably informed that Russia had “more cash PONY SALE I will sell at AUCTION a carload of Shetland and Welsh Ponies, half of them spotted, at Sunny Stock Yards, Saturday, * Oct. 4th, Sale starts at 1:30 p. m. Come and buy the kids a pony. A. L, REYNOLDS OVER INDULGENCE The present mode of fast liv- ing, fast eating, and “bad drink- ing” is partially responsible for the alarming prevalence of stomach trouble. Something you eat today may not agree with you—something you drink to- night may upset your stomach badly and cause you to wake up in the morning feeling way below par. Be fair to your stomach. For all such indiscretions, habit- yal or occasional, as well as for relief of gastric hyperacidity, sour stomach, gas disturbances, bloating, belching, heartburn, bad breath (halitosis), loss of ap- petite—take Pfunder’s Tablets— for sale by Hall’s Drug store, ex- clusive agent in Bismarck. in the Chicago market as a hedge.” He said he had received estimates that 35,000,000 bushels of Russian wheat was ready to ship from Euro- Pean ports. As far as the charge that Russia was intending to depress the price of noch said his committee let government's purpose. from the sale of 7,500,000 of grain were placed at lim- ited prices. He said if they were try- ing to force the price down, Soviet agents would have placed open order: to sell at ey price. If this method had been employed, it was impossiL'e, noch said, to estimate how much more the price would nave dropped. Badenoch testified that the grain trade considered sales in the futures 4) @etting Up Nights ighta, Backachs pat Getting Ue, bee Be i ern? Seas ens, ing, due to function- st Bata g sani in cid condi For Rent Two'room and kitchen- ette apartment down- town. Inquire at Gussner’s sliezine these condi nd encrsy, or mopey Sv see ae ii ‘Rall Plat Store. Hotel Radisson MINNEAPOLIS At Seventh between Nicolett and Hennepin. Convenient because of its location. In the center of commercial and theatricaldistricts. Ideal for its comfort and facilities. FOUR CAFES 500 ROOMS $2.00 Per Day and Up Visit the Famous BOOM Largest and Finest Ballroom in the Northwest have been about 70 miles out from St. |" jthe general uproar, Newsreel photog- raphers followed Bobby’s every step until he was driven away to his home. First to greet the emperior of the links was his wife, their young son, | Robert Tyre III and his mother. Bobby’s little daughter, Clara Malone, saved her welcome until noon, since school started this morning. | There was no sign today of the of- | ficial orderly welcome arranged for | Bobby in July when he returned; Chicago, Sept. 20.—(#)—President Barnard today appointed George Moriarty and Harry Geisel as the American League umpires for the world series between the Phila- |delphia Athletics and the St. Louis Cardinals, New York, Sept, 29.. E. | (Jack) Reardon and Charles Rigler |will be the National League umpires in the world’s series, President John A. Heydler announced today. pate No “cure”—but helps to reo XI VICKS home from Interlachen with the two British titles and the American open championship. No organized wel- come was planned. It was Bobby's wish that he be allowed to go on to his home, rest in quiet today and to- morrow, pick up his. law practice where he left off two weeks ago. 1M ONE APPLICATION DRESS THE HAIR TREAT THE SCALP. HAIR ROOT OIL Hunters Bring your ducks here to be prepared as you like them by our expert chef, Harry Pitt. We also make a specialty of serving special parties with best quality food and courteous service. G. P. Eat Shop By sending your clothes to us to be cleaned, pressed, relined, repaired, remodeled or dyed you are placing them in the hands of our experts, armed with the best and most mod- ern gquipment. Allow us to prove it. f We also operate cuz own dry cleaning plant. PHONE 664 We call for and deliver 3M Main Ave. LOTHES FOR EVERY AUTUMN OCCASION Master Cleaners & Dyers, Inc. Bismarck, N. Dak. 7O horsepower 114-inch wheelbase and STUDEBAKER This new Studebaker Six offers all the comfort and beauty of a big cae, of 114-inch wheelbase... «plus the thrilling performance of a grest 70." champion horsepower engine of true Studebaker stamina— the most powerful engine in any car of its price. Here is a car built to Studebaker’s 78-year-old standards of quality. Below $1000, there is no comparable car-per-dollar value. Check its quality. Consider such features as Thermostatic control of cooling, Double-drop frame, Self-adjusting spring shackles, Full power mufiler, Gasoline pump, Lanchester vibration damper, Cam-and-lever steer- ing, Clutch torsional damper, and Timken tapered roller bearings. But see the car, drive it, verify ite many fine-car features before you decide. Let us show you motordom’s biggest bargain in quality! A 4-DOOR THREE- WINDOW SEDAN AS LOW AS $895 Roadsterfor4 . . . » $795 ClubSeden . . . 2 . 845 Coupefor2 . oo « « 845 Coupefor4 . 2 2. 6 895 Tourer. 5 0 e+ - $095 Regal Tourer (6 wire wheels) 995 Regal Sedan (6 wire wheels) 995 Landau Sedan (6 wire wheels) 995, All prices at the factory Bismarck. Motor Co. Bismarck, North Dakota

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