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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1930 ~ 8 SAYS GRAIN TRADE | SUPPORTS ATTACKS McKelvie Demands That Fed-/ eral Trade Commission and Postoffice Investigate Believed A Suicide Washington, Oct. 16.—(7)—Sam R. McKelvie, grain member of the fed- eral farm board, said today that the organized grain trade was back of at- tacks on the farm board.. He has re- | quested the federal trade commission to investigate the attacks. i Most of the attacks emanated from | Nebraska and the northwest, he said, ; although material published in Ne- braska is being circulated in Kansas. In addition to requesting the trade commission to determine whether the { attacks constitute unfair trade prac- | tices, McKelvie said he had directed | articles circulated through the mails ! to the attention of the postoffice de- | partment. In instances, McKelvie said, “ Associcted Press Photo‘ The body of a young woman found on a farm near Philadelphia | was Identified as Grace De Lancey have found that supposed friends ot ; V. Newlin, 30, member of a proml- the cooperatives are being used” by| Ment Philadelphia family. those engineering the attacs to cir-| - culate the matter among farmers. *. *. ‘Chairman Legge said the attacks | “Seape With Lives were of two classes, one holding the board is inefficient and is not aiding | the farmer. and the other from the As Train Hits Car FORD BUYS OLD INCREASE REPORTED INBULDING PERMITS |Government Leaders Point to, Latest Statistics as Hope- | ful Sign of Revival Washington, Oct. 16.—()}—Govern- jment financial leaders regard with \interest recently compiled figures | showing an increase in building per- | mits for the United States as a whole lof 6.5 per cent in September over | | August, the first increa in Septem- {ber compared with August since 1917. | Building permits are looked upon | | by some fiscal experts as among the | | rellable indices of business conditions. | | However, the encouragement over the | September increase. is offset partly by ; the fact that building permits for this | ; September amounted to only $135.. | 437,089 compared with $173,307,852 | last September. | While government officers point | hopefully to the bu‘lding permits fig-° mode! Benz automobile which AUTO IN MUNICH Associated Press Photo While traveling in Munich, Germany, Henry Ford found an 1888 bought for his private museum in Detroit. He is shown (left) inspecting his purchase. about general business conditions. A non-governmental prediction that the present slump will continue for the rest of the year and that in- | dustrial production will not reach; williston’s plans for a new water normal before April was made here system based on the present well last night by Laurence H. Sloan, vice | sapply has been approved by the state | ures, they are still saying nothing | sas ; | Williston’s Water ' Plans Get State 0. K. grain trade saying it is hurting their | business. Business Houses Plan | Corn Show Displays| Business houses which are taking space in the display booths to line } the community building ri show are work- forms of exhibit. Many of the designs are being produced in corn, Five Carloads Stone Speed Courthouse Five carloads of building stone from Indiana arrived in the city, Wednesday, for the upper stories of the new courthouse, permitting the erection of the outer walls to proceed again. Delay in the arrival of the stone had been checking the opera- tions on the building. It is under- stood by the contractors that there will be no further delay in stone shipments, and they expect to speed the building from now on, to escape the effect of inclement weather. McMahons Back from Funeral of Pioneer Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. McMahon, Logan apartments, returned yester- day from Mott, where they attended the funeral of Mrs. McMahon's fath- er, Abraham Banning, 86, pioneer resident of Hettinger county. Serv- ices for Mr. Banning, who died Sun- day morning after a short illness, were held from the Methodist church of which he was a member. Mr. Banning was known to many Bis- marck people, having spent a part of the last few years at the McMahon home here. He was a retired farmer and carpenter. Hoover’s Secretary Loses $60,000 Suit Minneapolis, Oct. 16.—(?)—Walter H. Newton, secretary to President Hoover, today lost the $60,000 damage suit he brought against the Minneap- olis, Street Railway company for in- jury to his son, John, who lost a leg when a street car knocked him from his bicycle last year. Secretary Newton had brought two suits and both were tried at the same time. In one he asked $50,000 dam- ages on behalf of his son and in the other $10,000 for himself. The jury returned a verdict for the company. As the verdict was announced Mrs. Newton burst into tears and nearly collapsed while John hobbled to her ide on his crutches and,sought to conscle her. Counsel for Mr. Newton _ Said he would seek a new trial. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE Notice is hereby given that that certain mortgage, executed and deliv- tered by Gustaf Person and Emelia Yerson, his wife, Mortgagors, to of Hazelton, a corporation, of Hazel- ton, Emmons County, North Dakota, alortgagee, dated the ist day of No- Vember, 1916, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota, on the 15th day of November, 1916, at 11:40 o'clock A.M. and recorded in Book 132 .of Mortgages on ages and assigned by said Mort- wagee to Charles A. Munson by an fnsirument in writing dated the 13th day of November, 1916, and filed for yecord in the office ofthe said Reg- ister of Deeds on the 27th day of No- | Delay Effective Date | Nelson's father, Daniel Nelson, a vember, 1916, at 10:00 o'clock A. M and was duly recorded in Book 110 of | Assignments on page 562, will be fore- | closed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter, de scribed, at the front door of the Court House in the City of Bismarck, tn the “ounty of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, at the hour of 2:00 o'clock P.M. on the 18th day of October, 1930, to satisfy the amount due upon such tgage on the day of sale. The ribed in such mortgage 1 be sold to satisfy the ribed as follows: orth, Range . West of the pe due on such mortg ale, including interest, » of Thirteen Hundred Sixty-tour & 50/100 Dollars ($1364.50), together with the costs this foreclosure. CHARLES A. MUNSON, Assignee, Chas. Coventry, Attorney for Assignee Emmons County, North Da County of Bure Fourth Judi ‘orth Dakota to the above | miserable all the time. efendant: You are hereby summoned to sswer the domplaint of the plaintiff the above entitled action, the origiwal! be. It helped me right from the | wt which is on file in the office of the Clerk of the District Court of Bur- Jetgh County, North Dakota, and to! of your answer to the werve a copy aid complaint upon tho subscribers #t their office in the City of Wash- burn, McLean County, North Dakota, within thirty days from and after the ‘vice and in case of your ear or answer judgment en against you by default for the relief demanded in the com- ated-at Washburn, N. D., this 8th Gay of October, 1930. McCULLOCH & McCULLOCH, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Office and Po: ffice address, Washbur orth Dakota, 16-18 i | | “I suffered from stomach trouble 0/2-9-16 | My life,” said Mrs. Maritta Cline, 2301 Dis- | had no appetite and was afraid to eat Plaintift, vs Della | #S.eVen water caused pains. My head | | an- in| president of the Standard Statistics company of New York, in the course! of an address before the society of industrial engineers. He held that on @ seasonal basis alone the signs were distinctly against sustained improve- ment. Alleged Swindler Is Held at Fargo Fargo, N. D., Oct. 16—(@)—J. C. Moore, Fargo, alleged to have swind- led several Fargoans in a stock sell- ing venture, was in the county jail here today charged with selling securities without a license or permit. Arraigned in court today, he waived examination and was ordered he.d to the district court. He was unable to to furnish $2,000 bail. The complaint against Moore was made by Martin Kisser, farm laber- er south of Fargo, who alleges Moore sold him 20 shares of stork in the Morewood Products company at five dollars a share and obtained $25 as a down payment. Moore was alleged by police to have told several persons he planned to open a factory in Fargo and promised stock purchasers jobs in the factory. Kisser vas to be the night watchman at the plant. Moore is believed to have-come here from Calgary, Canada. Law Committee to Wahpeton, N. D., Oct. 16—(@)— Their light automobile carried nearly 100 feet when it was crashed into by a Milwaukee passenger train here to- day, two Wahpeton sisters escaped without permanent injury. Mrs. Margaret Dobbert, residing on a farm near here, received a broken leg and severe body bruises and Mrs. Millard Rickard, driver, of the car, escaped with slight cuts. Wahpeton Football Team Is Disbanded Wahpeton, N) D., Oct. 16—()}— Football at Wahpeton high school is ended for the year. Shirley Bugbee, who succeeded the late Harold Melvey as coach of the local squad, resigned his duties today and the resignation was accepted by school board members. Although Bugbee gave no reason ter quitting his post, school board mem- bers said dissension among the play- ers was the cause. Bugbee’s team had started the year auspiciously, winning from Fargo, 12 to 6. Friday's game with Casselton had been cancelled, the board said. . Of Freight Rate Boost St. Paul, Oct. 16—(4)—General in- creases in class freight rates, ordered Delay. Its Report Y the interstate commerce commis- _— sion recently, will not become effec-| Washi Oct. 16. ‘There tive until Feb. 1, next, and possibly | will be spina on prohibition from not then, the traffic department of} the president’s law enforcement com- heed St. Paul association announced | mission until well after election. lay. ‘The task of reaching mutually Railroads, the association said,| agreeable conclusions, even now that have informed the commission they|the bulky reports of investigators} cannot make the changes effective|have been digested’ by the members before Feb. 1. Besides, the associa-|of the commission, has proved so tion announcement said, the Twin|iarge that Chairman Wickersham de- Cities and Duluth have petitioned the ¢ after this week un- commission for.a reconsideration Of}til November 5, the day after elec- the case and this, with other factors, | tion. may result in another postponement of the date. ‘The task of getting 11 minds to- gether on an opinion on whether prohibition is being enforced and can hidigeawe se will then be resumed. In * meantime word from the mem- Being Treated Well | pers was that everything was pro- ceding harmoniously, but that no ef- Hankow, China, Oct. 16.—(#}—|fort had been made as yet to line up Bert N. Nelson, of Minneapolis,Jany group of members behind any American Lutheran missionary, who was kidnaped by communist outlaws} There are definite conclusions, October 5 from Kwangshan, south-/however, among’ members who estern Honan province, was reported|worked on the special committee today unharmed and suffering nojgathering facts for the prohibition hardships. He was held for ransom/report, and they are prepared to push of $300,000 Mexican (about $90,000) these. gold), The missionary's associates, writing from Sinyang, presumably after com- municating with Nelson, said his treatment was not harsh, but he was held a close U. S. Missionary Is Indigestion Goes— Quickly, Pleasantly ‘When you begin to suffer from heartburn, gas or indigestion, it’s usually the fault of too much acid in your stomach. The best way—the quickest way—to stop your trouble is with Milk pioneer Lutheran missionary in China, was killed by a stray. bullet at. Sinyang in 1926 when military factions besieged Sinyang. Konjola Only Medicine That Did the Work Cruel Stomach Trouble Ended —Now Enjoys New and Glori- out Health times its volume in stomach azids— and-does it instantly. The symptoms |disappear in five minutes, ‘You will never use crude methods when you know Phillips Mi¥. of Mag- nesia. And you will never allow your- self to suffer from over-acidity again. It is the standard anti-acid with doc- tors and has been for over fifty years. Your drug store has Phillips Milk of Magnesia, in generous 25c and 50c bottles, Full directions for its many uses in every package. Insist on the genuine] A less perfect product may not act the same. , in one form or another practically all {East Fourteenth St., Des Moine: Iowa. “I was told an operation was | | Necessary. Terrible cramping pains ‘kept me awake for hours at night. I ! {ached almost continually and I felt | “Then Konjola was recommended. ! What a Godsend Konjola proved to’ {start and today I am feeling fine. I | sleep soundly, my appetite is good | and those awful pains are all gane. It is remarkable how Konjola worked | ae everything else I tried had fail- ed.” Konjola contains no alcohol, no nerve-deadening drugs, no heart-de- pressing chemicals. It needs no such pareons ingredients its seeming mnders to work. Konjola is sold in Bismarck, N. D., at Hall’s drug store, and by all the | best druggisis in all towns jout this entire section.” through the office of A. L. Bavone, State sanitary engineer. Mr. vone visited Williston this week. The next step will be for the tax- Payers to vote a bond issue for the installation of the system. With the shifting of the Missouri away from the town, putting water intakes and sewer terminals out of service, Wil- liston resorted to wells for water, but these will require a lot of improve- ment to make them sufficiently ef- fective. An expenditure of $60,000 will ~be required, it is estimated. Hoover’s Sick Son to Go to North Carolina Washington, Oct. 16—()—Herbert Hoover, Jr., who is suffering with tuberculosis at the Hoover lodge in Virginia, is to be taken later in the fall to Asheville, North Carolina, for treatment. Captain Joel T. Boone, the white house physician, announced today that a home on Sunset mountain, overlooking Asheville, had been leased by the son of the president and he would be taken there early in No- vember. Dr. Boone said the president's son hhas responded well to {treatment and has made satisfactory progress since he was taken to the presidential camp in the mountains of Virginia several weeks ago. Believe Fire on Ship Was Set Deliberately Washington, Oct. 16.—(#)—The Evening Star said today that the navy department believes the fire which has disabled the battleship/ Colorado since June was deliberate and investigators in the guise of sea- men have been aboard her in an ef- fort to find the guilty parties. Typhoid Cause at Alexander Studied | A. L, Bavone, state sanitary engi- neer, is back from an investigation made to determine what the factors are that produce recurrent outbreaks ;of typhoid fever at Alexander, Mc- | Kenzie county. The investigation was made in company with Dr. R. W. Allen, head of the preventable disease bureau of the State Health department, and was part of a trip of almost a week which the engineer took through the state. , The two health officials found a number of possible factors in the community, but were unable to fix responsibility on any one. These fac- tors were the water supply, the swim- ming pool and possible carriers of the disease. Alexander has had recurrent cases of typhoid for the last three years, and the town is beginning to get in- terested in a movement to wipe out the infection. 2 |. PAYING BANK DIVID A dividend of 10 per cent is being paid to the depositors,of the closed Sykeston State bank. Payment is being made through the offite of P. A. O'Keefe, district manager at Bie marck, according to L. R. Baird, state receiver. CHEMIST ‘8 DEAD Rochester, Minn., Oct. 16—(7)— Herbert Dow, head of the Dow Chemical company of Midland, Mich., died at the Kahler hospital after an operation for a liver ailment. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR RENT—Two room partly fur- nfShed light housekeeping epart- ment in modern home, no objec- tions to one child. Right down- town. Call.at 307 FOR RENT—Furnished |. nished apartment, as desired, con- {~ sisting of three rooms and private bath, near downtown section. Call at 717 Thayer Ave. or phone 1391 or 622, If your child had a bad cold last week, don't be content just because the child is no longer hacking and sfleezing. A cold is bad enough, but @ child that catches cold easily and often, needs attention. Half-sick, pale, run-down children do not have the strength to resist disease and throw off infectin. The after - effects of a cold can be very serious. Start now to build up weight and strength. er John’s Medicine has been pI for over 75 years by count- less mothers. It is used reguarly by over 184 institutions, and hospitals. It is a simple food medicine that supplies the vitamins that every child needs. Children thrive on it amazingly. Their appetite improves, their very food seems to do them more good. Pale cheeks glisten with health, Little bodies become strong and vigorous. i Father John’s Medicine is a com- bination of simple food elements, none of which could harm an infant. Drug Store Because of its scientific combination of ingredients it brings all fits of cod liver oil in the form best suited to & growing child’s needs. It is easily assimilated by even the most delicate stomach. It tastes good and contains no alcohol or drugs. If your child had a cold last week, Washington’s Life , J To Appear in Films | Washington, , Oct. 16.—(P)—Ar- rangements were nearing completion here today for the filming of the pic- | record the life of | George Washington from boyhood to | ture which is to home overlooking the Schone tees, is to be the setting for much of this Picture which is to be sent over the country in connection with the cele- bration of the two hundredth anni- versary of the birth of George Wash- ington in 1932. tion picture industry and of the gov- ermment for the undertaking, ELKS, ATTENTION: Bismarek lodge No. 1199 will meet in regular session at 8 satertuinient se the programe, en! inment as ie followed by a func A. W. MELLON Exalted Ruler aD Garter Run-Stop $1.95- DRESS COATS $39.00 We urge you to see them here first. ’ Bismarck Cloak Shop 414 Main Ave. , “ Phone 268 i has been elected Chairman of the Board of Directors of this Corporation. — Transcontinental Shares Corporation 72 Wall Street New York City IF. WAS THE HAPPIEST MOMENT 7 OF HER LIFE .. the music you want when you want it ... either from the sit orrecoods ... and thethrilling new joy of ACTUALLY Hoskins-Meyer Home of KFYR ictor- Radio The New the bene- | }} Never Before at This Season Such Values on Frederick - James FURS. Thursday - Friday - Saturday October 16 - 17 - 18 WINTER COMES! And with it your urgent need for a smart snug fur garment. start now with Father John’s Medi-| iif cine. when this simple aid will help build strength and vigor. All druggists have it.—Adv. . Original Rexall 1c Sale Thursday, Friday and Saturday Unquestionably the greatest sale ever conducted by a drug store anywhere for your benefit. With every sale article you purchase at our regular price, you receive anether just like it for one cent. Save With Safety at Your Rexall Lenhart’s Drug Store Don't take ..eedless chances | We in- auggurate the-winter season with a selection of fur values made possible by two factors— 1—The lowest prices on raw furs since before the war. 2—Widely recognized economies in purchasing, manufacturing and selling through the Frederick-James complete and exclusive fur organization. Prices Are From $85 to $650 Among the Furs Are Hudson Seal Rock Seal Alaska Seal. Northern Seal Tropical Seal Skunk Arianna Otter Beaver Squirrel Raccoon Kolinsky Muskrat Plucked Otter Persian Lamb Silvertone Muskrat Japanese Mink Mendoza Beaver Australian Opossum Krimmer ij Fitch Convenient monthly payments may be arranged. Repairing - Remodeling - Cleaning ‘BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA