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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY DECEMBER 1, 1930 (? " Name— ec. Total] Name— c. Tota | * H 7 a. - Pry a ee oe ee ERE | SP TaPRROINE RD ORT| Hitomi Tots pyniay yagngR? | een ES WOUNDS THD BERORE sen, ie ot SEK John Puth, Sig of N W.. of SEM . John Puth, NW Orcar Jupma Adolph 1. Ps of SW4 m. Hryckow, SW Wm. Hryckow, NEY oe Nick Heyckow, 8W% Joseph K URGED BY HURLEY 29| Federal Punishment Fell Heavi- “5 HGH ARMY PAY OF MITCHELL STATES; er on Bootlegger in Last =| Fiscal Year Washington, Dec. 1.—(4)—Federal punishment fell more heavily on the bootlegger and the rum runner in the last fiscal year. all-plane passenger service between | San Francisco and New York, consti- | tuting the longest all-plane route in | the United States, will be inaugur-‘ ated tonight. The new service established by | Boeing Air Transport and National : air Transport, subsidiaries of united ' aircriVt, will operate on a 42 hour! schedule. Train time is 80 to 85 hours. | Actual flying time between the two) seaboards will be only 26 hours and | 30 minutes. [S WINNER AGAIN L. E. Peterson Picks Off Another | Blue Ribbon With Favor- ite Grain | Chicago, Dec. 1.—(#)—The old mas- ter of the barley country has put it New » Dec. 1.—(P)}—Capt. Peter Lenderscarn, 63, and a sail- or man, is minus a leg today be- cause he stepped into his own burglars’ trap. Angered by the ransacking of his Midland Beach bungalow, the { skipper of the good barge Lands- live, set an ambush for the next trespasser. He rigged up a load- ed shot gun inside the door with one end.of a fishing line attach- ed to the trigger and the other | to the doorknob. Then he closed | the place for the winter and for- To Be Held Tuesday HE I SHOT 10 DE ATH: Funeral services for William Fred- erickson, farmer of the Baldwin ter- ‘itory who died Friday from exposure GER ES, {incurred when he lay alone in his | unheated home for four days and from ulcers of the stomach, will be {held at 2 p. m., Tuesday, at Webb's | funeral chapel. | _ Rev. Emil Benzon, pastor of. the | Swedish Lutheran church, will have harge of the services and pallbear- Macomb, Ill., Dec. 1—(4)—An al. a leged petty burglar, docile appearing | Crt, Wamtooca wom the Bald- in his actions, suddenly turned into Desperate Gunman Killed in Il- linois Thought Kidnaper of Jamestown Man Congress received the tidings today j over again. » | got about it. ican iI]- | ., Cat! Erickson, a half-brother from x | thraagh the MROURT report’ of Atcor: SOVIET Ml AY FINISH | ee seine pie ed eg | Yesterday as he entered there fig Fao POUAEenER Ene cunts twa | Bozeman, Mont., was here today. A 1) Engineers Working on 330/2¢Y General Mitchell, which sald en- | has won so many championships with | #8 8 blast and he received the others before he himself was slain by | S8te. Mrs. Mary Peterson, Medina. ng ‘ {forcement was reflected in prosecu- | ‘ charge below the left knee. one of his victims. He was ident!-| “aS at Mr. Prederickson’s beciside iz?! Waterway Projects in All tions improved over 1929. his favorite grain that even the rec- Surgeons at Staten Island nos- fied as Edwin Veril, 28. Canton, M,| Wen he died but was forced to re- -3 “Evidently the commercial violator F jord-keepers have almost stopped: pital were forced to amputate the Veril, arrested on a loitering charge, turn home. TB Romans, N14 of NHig 2 12.29 Parts of Country | was having more of his day in court,” j counting. picked off another blue rib-| leg and administer two blood in front of a battery station, began |, Frederickson also left two daugh- , Kari Wolf, SW 3 5439 Secs jit continued. “Jail and prison sen- | bon last night and brought his state | transfustons. He is expected to firing from an automatic pistol he | (> Emma, at Cristobal. Canal | Reinhold Hornbacker, : 1 |tences were imposed in 27,709 cases i the first major crown of the interna-| _ live. had secreted in his sleeve, just as the | 202 and Sophia, living in Bismarck. . NW. os 4 gage ‘Washington, Dec. 1.—(?)—The sec- | in 1930-5,107 more than in 1929. ‘The { tional livestock exposttion’s grain and ———— SUtOMDUIE to -WHIH he wae Bel 3 Tecbe [Tetary of war saluted his commanding | average length of sentences increased jhay show. i iaken to jail, arrived in front ot the | 8 Russian Trial ant officer today, reported the army more/ in greater proportion than did the ead ee alt | Peterson showed barley of the six | W NTER TAKES police Mane Delicstiah Baward 8 On Iria ok 8 42.60 /efficient than at any time since the! number.” V. V. Kuibyshev, State Planning| 1%ed type to become the 1930 barley | Whitlesiy. 60, was the first to die, He; Deny Frame-up Rumor pices Cree WArTurgs bis prepeeetias te 29 Vessels Seized ee Meobicht | king but he went on to make the mat- | | was shot’ through the head as” he | § 30.93 the be} Moreover, 29 vessels were seized for| Head, Is Optimistic Over See Bieta Soieee bediad = Hl | stepped from the machine. Moscow, Dec. 1.—()—Eight Soviet H ‘These Secretary Hurley embodied participating in a revival of “thej} Development specleen. he bate ocr soi na. | Driver Is Wounded | engineers facing execution for havin: vutzk 3 in” his athe report "40 PRRARE liquor smuggling business as con- P' ty Behe: SEE y atta rite te | Turning quickly. the gunman sent a | Plotted the overthrow of tiie Moscow gon ee Te aaa tt Hoover ‘es fonews! ducted on the high seas and in our | ana mah ee | bullet into the abdomen of Policeman | government, insist their trial is not ae. Magdalina Holwegn: 45 of SEM liner, SW Ben Benson, Wy of W Ben Benson, of S) Ni& of SEX. Richmond Tow: E. 0. Bartz, 8% of . ‘and lots 3 and 4 Gottfried Bossert, Adolph Dekner, § SEY. Clyde J. Rhodes, Nig of 1" Hae otf John Weber, NEY . Weber, Si 0 SW. % 1 Voldal, > of SW SE Wt, ot Me That continuance of building up the air corps enlisted strength by itransfers from other branches, under the mandatory five-year program, means the army soon will be seriously handicapped. That increased army pay is a vital subject requiring proper adjustment, s|Ppay being related to morale and mor- liale to efficiency. And, that at the present depletion rate, “it will be but a matter of sev- eral years when there will be no prop- g {erly balanced reserve stocks on hand ment’s far-flung activities, from su- pervising the government-owned in- land waterways transportation sys- tems to its functions in the Philippine Islands and Porto Rico. During the fiscal year, army engi- ;Neers were working on 330 harbor and waterway projects in all parts of the territorial waters.” British. The report did not embrace ‘the prohibition unit's activities, since these remained under treasury juris- diction until the close of the fiscal year on June 30. Of the 52,437 prohibition cases ter- | minated, nearly 78 per cent brought | guilty pleas, about 13 per cent were dismissed and the remainder had jury | trials. The ratio of convictions by jury remained constant, 73 per cent. Assistant Attorney General Young- quist, in charge of enforcement, said All but four were are actively violating the law them-/ selves.” Such officers convicted num- | bered 95, and 65 cases were pending when the present fiscal year began. | Th year's padlockings numbered 8,801, a gain of 2,498 over the previ- ous year. A total of 11,882 such cases were commenced. | five. Editors, Note: The following | statement, given exclusively to the/ Associated Press by Valerian V. Kuibyshev, vice president of the council of people's commissars | and president of the state plan- | ning commission of the soviet union, gives a Russian’s view of present conditions in Russia. | (Copyright, 1930, by The Associated | Press, All Rights Reserved) | Moscow, Dec. 1.—(?)—In two years| of operation. Valerian V. Kuibyshev,} succeeded beyond expectations but also has given every promise of <om- | pletion within four years instead of | “The present task,” says M. Kuiby-! shev, who is responsible for putting | the five year plan into operation, | “consists of fulfillment of the plan before schedule, that is, within four! the only noteworthy opposition. Pet- erson had preceded his triumph in ; the sweepstakes by taking first in| ' both two-rowed and six-rowed barley | classes for his region. Two other veterans brought other first places to Montana: Thomas E. Smith of Cor- valis with his tre-bi type and C. Edson Smith, a fellow townsman in the class for all other types. Crowning of the barley monarch shared Sunday honors at the exposi- tion with the intercollegiate livestock and crops judging contests. The first second by Kansas A. and M. college. Today brought the judging of fat cattle, shéep and swine into the show's spotlight with two cattle breeding classes and two horse class- es also scheduled to be started. Carson High Loses cee eens) AS MERCURY DROP Snow Late Tonight or Tuesday and Higher Temperatures | Expected in State (By the Associated Press) King Winter took a firm grasp on | North Dakota and the northwest to- | A minimum of 18 degrees below was reported from Devils Lake, while at Fargo it was 10 below. Jamestown had nine below and at Bismarck and Mandan it was zero. | The northwestern corner of the state reported higher temperatures ; With the thermometer registering four | Ernest Bowman, 36, fatally wounding | @ frame-up. foony and then switched the fire of his| Answering an article in a Warsaw !gun on Alfred Links, driver of the | newspaper which said their confes- | car, wounding him critically. At this; sions of intrigue had been obtained | Point in the fight Luther Jackson, | from them through coercive meay.s by ; nother policeman. already suffered | the secret police. the eight testiffea ; from a wound received from a fight | yesterday they had been treated asgen- | with burglars three weeks ago, ran; tlemen by the government agents and | from the police station and was hit | had gained in bealth while in prison. {in one of his wrists in an exchange | of shots with Veril, who by this time | had taken the wheel of the car in an | effort to escape. { Veril, however, got no farther than | a block from the station, before the! Federal Building Site Selected for Grafton 22 i: ‘ si ; |for immediate issue to mobilized man| the work had een embarrassed “by | Mision, asserts, the soviet five year “Ujqu Wot OF, Oklahoma | college of | Cor Sf Neminersuures Dlunged cown- | dying Bowman mustered enough ; .j{onington. Dee. 1 u—The tn | # wer.” some state and municipal officers i ; if and mechanic arts for! v state the coldest 1 Halts sivbeteae ublic buildings " POMS report reviewed the depart-| 2ome State ,and municipal, officers | industrialigation plan not only” 1as| the fourth time in six yeare and the | wemther of the season, jsirength to tise from his prostrate | committee today selected a site at | position in the car and empty the cartridges of his pistol into Veri back. 1 Took Three Minutes | The whole fight occupied less than three minutes. The police apparently were taken by complete surprise, as Veril when accosted by them near the battery | | Fifth and Griggs avenue in Grafton, V. D., for a new, federal building. The site was offered by the city without | cost to the government. | Gussner’ extra specials page 5 Give That Cold ‘ ’ ey in bee to 50 eats scien nant Merny ed the | YE8rs ” | ai oe Aes station, submitted to a search. He, ie secret mentioned the he ell lal as unsolv¢ e | oe | * ; In innesota the temperature | entered the automobile without pro- | Ney 4 400,000 appropriated for flood control | problem of ‘congestion in some of the — cheat Bers Biase | Opening Encounter} skidded to 20 below zero at Bemidji, | test. bs | Just 6 H Sah es ait a ee ee work on the Mississippi this fiscal| federal district courts, particularly | which ended Oct. 1, M. Kulbyshev the lowest mark in the northwest this; Veril, reputed to have been a drug | ours ee su Ttealty Co. vi year. The program includes levee and| large cosmopolitan districts.” He ipreaénts “tigi estaie ainiifiereane | Carson, N. D., Dec. 1.—Carson high | season. addict, had spent some time in: ’ q Sry: revetment work on the main river,| urged provision for additional judges, Devon the puanned eeaneeitin on sckool opened its cage season by los- South Dakota Warmer | Peoria, where he was known to police | McKesson's Darol, Fok Stran work on the set-back of the Bird's|and that steps be taken to supple-| peyond {he Planned produelion est-, ing to the Carson alumni, 21 to 19. | In South Dakota the weather was |as a gambler. |ineatmenty cheeEac Gold Gare ehoeE Loomis 'F. 6|Point-New Madrid Floodway, and on| ment inadequate forces in the offices | fone. ‘notin a single one Ne liste! ine yor erouners led the scor-j less severe. ‘The coldest point was| Canton police said he also had aj and drives it out of sour aystennn Loomis ¥. the Bonnet Carr Spillway, as well as| of United States attorneys. toned; not in a single one he ists ing during the first halt for the| Huron, with six above. record there as an automobile thief | 121 ‘Two tablets every 3 hears with ae dredging for the navigable channel.! The congestion was illusirated by &| been projected. high school. Huber, alumni ace, led, “Not quite £0 cold tonight; Tuesday | and highway prowler. They arrested | 4 full glass of water does the work! 2 |He promised liberal use of the emerg- | report of the judicial conference held | Perr eet eats operation of | He lumnl. | Snow and warmer” was the prediction | woman whose name was given a5’ Changes the system from, an sed ency fund to sid localities above | isst October, written by Chief Justice | 1." tak furnishes sufficient mate | woos oesiay. of the high school, for Minnesota, while for North Da-|Mrs. Nellie Munson, who associated | condition to alkaline condition. 1 { backwater influence which are visited | Hughes. It showed that at the close | (2) See Sor eerttyinguehesrenitty ot| referee. | kota the forecast was “snow late to- | with him, and obtained from her a| which cold and pri an de ue \ Seduce aya 34 by damaging waters and unable to/ of the fiscal year there were pending | (8! Dotlt for veniying the Fenty ft —_— [night or Tuesday followed by rising | confession. They said that she and | thrive, ‘Relieves hieeaactos alae ang f Paulas enias take care of themselves. upon the dockets of district courts | HiT Or he objections and doubts! Qs : temperatures.” Veril recently had kidnaped Olaf! the jain and aches of nearaing ond Y | 155,730 cases, more than 7,000 over the | PIT tn ae eee ed a eed | Spies Complains aint Chtcago, weather bureau pre- [ah TLE | neuritis, All without any bad effects SB. I previous year. mong | ict ie cold advancing from the |N. D., who later escaped. j el Theodore Annunsone NWiG 1 British Hoping That || “we are aiso informed.” Hughes (sentatives, of | bourgeois, economic, Fargo Gets Best | northwest would overspread most oft shige on oul:teuhibned Wenn eT j Theodore Annunson, SW%4 1 . te * wrote, “that in the 35.849 criminal | cent i a ee pratt cget od | Of Snowplow D pits forecasting district with snow: Alluvial Valley’s loo ieane thu Gch tae a ~ = a ‘ Nationwide Strike cases pending on June 30, there were | pdt ee ney ia the jan Al Pp al! furries an accompaniment in many a ‘y's eae pave zip ur . Hialt- . sa }ée| included 22,671 cases under the na-| Called) being exceeded 8 most — | spots. Zero to an unofficial 19 below Protection Planned) ¢-. ol ate aut al ane ee swig Will Not Materialize: iinet Sronibition act” {important sections of national econ-| — +Continued trom paze ones at Bemidji last night signaled the be- VEC! ger. Get Darol and get rid of a cold 4 \ Conrad Johnso ices j omy.” he writes. Spies suggested that the ciiy be | ginning of the march of cold weather] Washington, Dec. 1.—/P)—Protec- peegrrnii pemeateepetphe eter se J. R. Hilsdorf, ta i { | London, Dec. 1—/P)—Despite a par- | | tial strike in the coal fields of Scot- Rugby Bank Absorbs | letka's progress: 14 Billions in 2 Years There follow figures showing piati-| ; decorated at once in anticipation of | the Christmas season as the iurger which was expected to bring temper- j atures down to 10 above in Chicago son Service Druggists and other in- dependent drug stores sell Darol with @ guarantee of satisfaction or money {tion of the Alluvial Valley, including it. Francis, Yazoo, Tensas and Atcha- a { § + + ities are doin; and vicinity by nightfall. i ‘i {land, where 92,000 workers are af Institution at Balta) 1, ino years M. Kuibysnev says,|" e. | atfall. |falaya basins, from the maximum flood | back. A McKesson & Robbins’ by . YS, | | At Mil kee, W! e t si 5 a i | fected, British authorities today had total output in planned industries! Will Decorate City | was’ much colder, @ snow storen last | Possible. 48 contemplated in the Mis- | produet—Adv. 4. Hilsde el M, Johuso: Engen. ¢ of NW of Grass Lake Towns! 5; of employment, but many of the! hope that a nation-wide coal strike, at first threatened for today, would be averted. In Scotland the Miners’ Federation | ordered 92,000 members out Sunday ! morning, in protest at imposition of the so-called “spread-over” scheme | workers returned to their posts for ‘The Pierce County State bank of} zens State bank, Rugby, Gilbert Sem: ingson, state bank examiner, an- nounced today. Both banks are in Pierce county. The Rugby bank re- | cently took over the Farmers State! bank, Wolford. The Wolford and under piatiletka is estimated at 000,000). “The excess of fulfillment of piatiletka for the first two years is particularly remarkable in the field of heavy industry,” he writes, “while; | piatiletka provides in this field for \ _H. P. Goddard, secretary of the As- Balta has been absorbed by the Citi- | 29,338,000,000 rubles (about $14,690,-| sociation of Commerce, said the city will decorate the lamp posi» in the white-way district with evergreen | festoons and colored globes aad sug- gested that all of the wark oc done at | the same time. ‘night hampered firemen in fighting \a blaze of undetermined origin which swept through three stores and did [damage estimated by firemen at $200,000. | - Freighter Is Helpless | A damaged rudder rendered the President D. E. Shipley aaaounced {| 2,000 ton freighter’ Brazil helpless be- missippi project. | This would be done by raising exist- | jing levees about three feet and strengthening them greatly and by {permitting flood waters in excess of their capacity, to find their way to; {the gulf through the natural flood ways in the lowlands of the basins adjacent to the river “which lowlands | Balta banks are in the Rugby trade that Spies had been deSigna‘2d cus- | fore a chilly wind over Lake Michi- | 12,476,000,000 rubles, the actual out! Oe — —_———— Geo. W. Weber, nds tingdahl, N Olson, fr Mod iP pis 1 and ' Jast night's shifts. ‘ers failed to show up at the mine pots today and the shafts remained ‘idle. The sole exception was in the/ | Ayrshire district where the miners decided to remain on at a day-to-; {| day basis pending efforts to reach a| general settlement of the critical na- tional coal dispute. News Print Prices ‘Will Not Be Lower | it 12 miles | | "Ninety thousand Scottish coal min-; lhe ag of them about 12 miles / put was 13,764,000,000 rubles. Illness of Subpoenaed Actress Investigated} Detroit, Dec. 1.—()—Sudden ill-| ness of a young actress who has been | subpoenaed by the special crime{ grand jury here was under investi H tion today by police and prosecution ; officials who held statements indicat- { ing poisoned whiskey was given to | put exceeds estimates may be gauged | by the fact that production of oil, Steel, rolled metal, electrotechnical,; agricultural machinery, and: general; Work being done there by a service | machinery exceeded the estimated “The extent to which actual out- output. “Particularly remarkable successes! their monthly meetings, he suid, and | a hunting expedition. were achieved by socialist industry in the second year. In 1929-30 the gross; Munity enterprises output increased 25 per cent, exceed- ing piatiletka estimates about five) per cent. “It must be emphasized tha‘ the} ; todian of the club property aad csked j that all club property in tie posses- sion of members be turned over to him. J. J. Schmid, Wilton, told 91 club which recently was organized. |The members make contributions at the money is used to finance com- shows, better bull celebratious and similar projects. Roland Crane was awarded the at- tendance prize. the | j Ban but the beat was towed to safety. | The more moderate temperatures of yesterday brought their tragedy as well as the cold wave of the days preceding. The bodies of two lads were foun in the bottom of a sand- pit north of ‘Nelson, Neb., after they | had broken through thin ice while on | The area for which cold was fore- such #5 corn | cast included the Great Lakes region, | north Pacific divisions. ; most of the northwest states, and | parts of Nebraska, Iowa and Missouri. | Burr Addresses have always carried extraordinary flood waters.” Protecting levees are planned on the edges of these natural flood ways | ‘to restrain the waters within them so/| far as practicable and to protect the j lands outside. i Reduction of the river and harbor divisions from eight to six is planned | by consolidating the north and south | Atlantic divisions and the south and WAS ‘BACK-HANDED COMPLI- MENT’ } ia netine actress, Margaret Owen, is the| increase in the output of industries| Guests, in addition to Mr. Schmid haar he ea Wan eka cals | Feen-a-mint is Mazel Grove Townsihp 144. ey Interna- ie actress, Margaret en, is 01 5 5 peer 5 . ;Rev. Dr. Henry Van Dyke explains ringlagllbees > hy qtianson, Tots” 23 a er. poe vee. rat ie an.| sweetheart, police said, of Nicholas! producing means of prod wetion! were aah G. Arntson, G. F. Peixe and | Gideon Meeting that in a recent speech in Philadel- | the answer. Cleansing action of sate een ‘onitibed to cits Rees reine contract| ‘Diamond Bill) Dellabonta, & racke- | amounted last year to 40 per cent, ex- | Tre pn ee we ae Bismarcl. phia he termed the award of the; smaller doses effective because Nels customers that there would be no|teer. who goes on trial today with | ceeding the planned figure for the) r Assembly, and E.' yudge A. G. Burr was the principal | Nobel prize to Sinclair Lewis “a back- you chewit. At your druggists Geo, Florence Lena ~ Bruns| an Helen Coniai i jots a M. B. Haldorson, SE% of N’ ME of ki front door of the County Court House! A small boat carrying four internes | hae heczaree fn W- to 1H |; ies. Magele Neiters, NW Counts, Nosth Dakutarat the hour et| of the San Diego county hospital was, '72.000 in 1930-30. i NO MEDICAL EXAMINATION 34.85 change in the price of news print for, | 1931. | The effect, the announcement said, | is to stabilize news print prices for the coming year at the same rates as ; the company established at the closc/ | of 1929, which, in New York and Chi- j cage figure $62 a ton. i NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- | CLOSURE SALE Notice Is Hereby Given: ‘That that] tain mortgage executed and deliv- d by Joseph W. Guthrie and Ruth ie, husband ‘and wife, of Bis- to orth Dakota, mortgago! gages on page 5, will be foreclosed by a sale of the mises in such mort- gage and hereinafter described, at the De- Frank Salimone on a charge of kill- | ing two policemen last June. | Her condition today was described | as temporarily serious.” 15 Men and Pair of Boats Lost at Sea San Pedro, Cal., Dec. 1.—)—The fate of 15 men and two boats was, veiled by the Pacific today as coast) guardsmen and naval forces prepared to conduct searches for them off the southern California coast. The purse seiner Fidelity and her though a minute search already has been made. missing off the Coronado isiands, 20 ‘recorded in the light industries inj | which available agricultural and rawj®Utomobile in which she was riding | The stimulation of native raw mate-| year by 16 per cent. ** * “In short, in all important indus-; tries we are progressing beyond; Piatiletka figures. “A less rapid tempo of growth was materials acted as a limiting factor. rials and resources will enable us! next year considerably to exceed the; Piatiletka estimate in the light in-| as on the whole, the pre-war level, of industrial production already has} been doubled. | ©. Stout, Fargo. MINNESOTA COED Minneapolis, Dec. 1,—(@)—Margaret Baldwin, 18, daughter of Judge Mathias Baldwin, was killed when the with a party of University of Minne- Sota students skidded and overturned. Three other occupants of the car were only slightly injured. One of them was Albin Krezowski. regular | dustries (food, cotton, etc.) as well/€nd on the university football team. & ! Additional Markets , been mi He states that due to improved cs speaker at the regular meeting of | Bismarck chapter of the Gideons Sat- jurday. | Included on the program were a Ipiano solo by Elizabeth Raahn, a {piano duet by Barbara Henry and Elizabeth Raahn, and a vocal solo by George Humphreys accompanied by Mrs. Grace Morris, who directed the music. | Following the program a dinner was jserved. C. G. Boise presided. The jprogram was in charge of C. C. Con- {verse. W 3 ty a. 1 W! Austin, NEWS Fee ee ae eter tcots’ orts| crew of 11, missing since Nov. 21,| y¢ yugenanee inereaeed |e «| School Laws Group \ ‘Will Protect You for a whole year Jot ee, dated the fard day of Decem-| were objects of a search off the puttding program fiemer are aie tat] CFurnidtAhM ARE GRATS Meets in Bismarck’ v. 8 26, und filed for record in the| Santa Barbara islands by two coast! head “of the platiletka estimates : : Pre | eee ate int, Ban [Burleigh Gounty-sNorth Dakota, on guard patrol boats. The Fidelity ona conti pai ieion Bee Members of the state commission , i tz, lots 1, 2, and the 28th day of December, 1936, and| disappeared in a wind storm and no po ey ee * season ot ge on MRE acs ppaeenen teen today | \ 1A ¢ duly recorded in Book 196 of Mort- trace has been found of her, al-{| = ‘Y gl ice AND to hear delegations of educators on proposed changes in the state's school the safe and scientific laxative. Feen-a-‘mint FOR CONSTIPATIO! A *10 BILL ! | ouch own! | | ACCIDENTS 70 Years Accepted The commission is considering! changes in school laws which will be! | embodied in a report to be made to’ the state legislature. hi 2 o'clock P.M. on the 15th day of cember, 1930, to sat the amount jdue upon said premises and mortgage at the time of sale. ‘That the premises described in said will be sold to mortgage, and wh satisfy the same, are those certain premises situated in Burleigh County, North ota, and described as fol- | cultivation methods the gross grain’ Anyone 16 ¢ miles west of San Diego. jerop of this year was 86,500,000! a } tons against 71,700,000 tons in 1929, Davis Would Reduce an increase of 206 per cent. Mar-| ketable grain produce, he said, was Immigrants to U. S.} 326 per ‘cent above piatiletka provi |> Speltz | Dark hard ‘Mar John Halpi F ard winter Chas. Hettler, No Dues or Assessments Members of the body are E... Tay- lor, H. O. Saxvik, Harold D. Shaft,! | w. F. Parsons, Bismarck; H. K. Jen-} sen, and Edward Erickson, Grand $10,000 Principat Sum 310,000 loss of hands, feet or eyesight kly benefit for stated cu York, De $2 wee. lows, to-wit: Lot Bight (L-8) in Block ‘Three (B-3) of Macombers’ additions to South Wilton, North Dakota. That there will be due on wage on the dat of Six hundred Washington, Dec. (?)—Only those foreign workers needed by American industry would be allowed entry, under a pian emphasized today by Secretary Davis as he turned from sions. “Thus,” he states, “the grain; problem has been fundamentally, | solved.” | | With regard to collective farming} he says that upwards of one-fifth of Peasant households have joined in! ectric Bond and 8) Standard Ol of Indiana RUTH MORGAN MARRIES New York, Dec. 1—(4)—Ruth Mor- gan, Ziegfeld showgirl and daughter of State's Attorney M. Earle Morgan | Forks. H bocTo! benefit ents or sickness S| BIL hospital other attractive features to help you tin of need, a! as shown in poliey. Ss and Free Brunswick Demonstration Phone 762 the mortgagee, 0. and Offi dress, ‘iy, ran. D. Compony 271-R College Blag. Bismarck, N. D, ithere doubtless to work for the legis- lation advocated. The document, which reviewed his decade of secretaryship, dealt in gen- eral with activities cs the federal "ie . " ployment service and the buresu of Heated cor eidire.treet® 874 ™4Y labor statistics. Unemployment dur- Mandan Street from Broadway toling the current slack business period was not discusssd. however. i etre | FOUR PERSONS KILLED { i sertions marking success of soclal-j | ization of livestock, liquidation of the | kulak or landed peasant class, sur- passing of piatiletka quotas by the | railroads, and improvement of the | cultural standards of the population.| Wages, he says, have increased 12.1 per cent. . EINSTEIN GETS RAINCOAT Berlin, Dec. 1.-(—With a new 7| ot Forty two dollars and twenty seven {cabinet to the senate. the collectives—that is, that more _ oft Fairmont. W. Va. was marned al Special, policies, fssued. to Bust: \ Geo. Sattler, N 1 er els Uudesd etr wie Sani Oe Gol: | nn ee, tees opment. ataene | tien FOBNA00 | peaeaot | honseholds [bere last ‘Friday to James V. Con. | Dahners-Tavis omar gin | A. . Garnes and A. H, te 30.62) esi 1 67/100 dol’ |the past year.” he informed President | have rejected individual farming and verse, financier, the Evening Wor! . : 4 ueigeso 1 toendse' tees ‘and ‘costs, of this wale: Hoover, “has more clearly than ever|have taken up collective farming. jsaid today. i Music Corp. 3 All: Policies None. Postel Geo. Sattle: 1 and foreclosure. shown the need for this departure | The collectives planted 36,000,000 hec- Sus oes Bismarck Mandan ‘Semi-Annually er Annually. sys 20 Sov 1930. from our haphazard method of immi-| tares as compared with 20,600,000)... LIBERTY BONDS Full information gladly given. Steiber, j LR. BA AS RECEIVER | gration control.” | Planned for the fifth year of r‘ati- York; D without obligating you BE oe aio Bin Oe netis. ReGay | The stand was taken in his tenth) letka. In the grain regions 43.8 per| First = Se inthe Te apa ee NORTH DAKOTA, “land final annual report as head of | cent of the peasants have joined the —103, | A. Arntson Elizabetir fortes, the labor department. Tomorrow he | collectives. qeeenety teeta \ District Represen' sw. Cameron and Helgeson, Attorn enters congress from Pennsylvania,| M. Kuibyshev proceeds with as- ’ " i top that North Duketn Acsidunt Suauaenn i DULUTH CASH GRAIN Phone Duluth, Minn., Dec. 1.—(4)—Close: Flax on track $1.67 71%; to ar- Pa aie Dec. 1.64%; May Wheat No. dark northern 174%4- 79%.c; No. 2 do 72%-76%c; No.*3 68%. -72'4¢; No. 1 northern 74% -77%¢; No. 2 do 71%4c; No. 1 amber durum 10% -76%c; No, 2 do 69%-76%4c; No, 1 durum 69%c; No. 2 do 68%4-69%c; No. 1 mixed durum €7%-71%c; No. 2 SETS OI rere gemma, ? Co., NW% Union Central COLD inahurry O., Union Central Co., SEY . The following streets have been des- James Flynn, E% gf Capital Funeral Parlors Avenue E. Twelfth Street from Rosser Avenue to Avenue B. Sliding on all other streets and ave- nues is prohibited. Parents are re- Chicago, Dec. 1.—()—Four persons|raincoat obtained under difficulty | do 66%-' . i * : ~~ 208 aaa quested tp assist the authorities by | oo xitied ins collision between alAlbert Einstein has left for the|gseen es es eee RUB y ais oi on undesignated Streets or catching |small sedan and a Grand Trunk; United States. Frau Einstein bought; Oats No. 3 white 33%c. Licensed balmer First National Bank, on cars OF Fe snainen en ed freight train last night. Edward Er-|it at the last minute. A clerk asked| No. 1 reye 40%-44%ac. Phone—Day or Night—2? First National Bank, |” these regulations, wine, of Battle Creek, Mich.. the en- | that the professor come for a fitting: lean, No. 3 yellow 71':c; No. 4 yel- Jos. W. Tschi i Washburn, SW", Motorists must come to a complete |gineer, said the automobile did not /“If you knew how hard it was even to Maric ohsokee Re tance ig aha has os. W. Tschumperlin Security Co. Chas. A. Andersot Peter Procop, SE% stop at designated ‘vhrough Streets.” Islow up for warning signals at the! persuade my husband that he needed x \ Prop. jee is new coat!” said Frau Einstein. |dium to good 42-46c; lower grades [38-42c. ON YOUR CHEST — * ‘ ‘ 11/29; 12/4 COMMISSIONERS.