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LEGION LEADERS {Electric Lights to Be Turned Off and On With Light Blow of Breath EXPRESS THANKS FOR PUBLIC AID ‘Assert ‘Open Your Heart’ Cam-/ paign Proved Fine Spirit of Local Citizens A device for tired people and in- valids' who are unable to perform such a difficult task as turning out an electric light will be dem- onstrated at the research exhibits here next week in connection with the sessions of the American As- sociation for the Advancemer.t of ‘Science, - Using the device, these persons may blow out or turn on an elec- tric light merely with a whiff of breath. It is an invention of Dr. E. E. Free, New York, a consult- ing engineer and head of the Free laboratories, The device consists of two tiny discs mounted in a telephone mouthpiece about an eighth of an inch apart. When the breath Appreciation of the “wonderful support” given to the American Le- gion in its “Open Your Heart” cam- paign for the benefit of the needy and unfortunate of Burleigh county, Kinnon, commander of Lloyd Spetz Post No. 1. “Credit for the success of this ef- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1930 is blown on them they make a contact which operates a relay. The relay, in turn, operates the electric light circuit. Another whiff of breath sepa- rates the two discs and turns off the current. The gigantic titanothere, a pre- historic rhinoceros which once foraged in Wyoming, Nebraska and North Dakota, will be placed on exhibit by Henry Fairfield Os- burn, president of the American Museum of Natural History. In a wall painting 26 feet long and 16 feet wide these beasts will be shown in their natural habitat. There will be five or six titanothere skulls weighing be- tween 50 and 200 pounds and iin approximately five feet Cleveland, Ohio, Dec. 27—(F)— | | | | fort must go, first of all, to pub- 4 lic,” the Legion men said. “Had it) John O'Leary. East i it been for the fine support given ’ this effort by the people of the city| Grand Forks, Is Dead and county it could not have been didaanaas East Grand Forks, Minn., Dec. 27.— ; interest which the Legion-| (John O'Leary, 78, pioneer mayor naires took in the movement is indi-| of this city for four terms, died last that approximately | night at the home he moved to in| 60 of them were active in the move- | 1984 when he settled here. ment. A lot of hard work had to be] Born in Ont Mr. O'Leary came war veterans did it} to Grand Forks in splendid fashion. Every commit-| seross the river five years later. He tee chairman and every committee | served as alderman several terms be- member was constantly on the job.| fore being elected mayor. He was a ‘Their work enabled us to take full! member'of the school board 27 years. wet caret es WTTUTDPAW MONTE CARLO GUARANTEES the various agencies, civic bodies and business firms which contributed so sple . Miss Mary Cashel-of the Red Cross helped by her advice and France Is Expected to Move Troops Into District to Stop ‘Troubles sympathetic cooperation. Her ex- Perience enabled us to avoid many Pitfalls. “We are indebted to the Woolworth company for the use of its vacant nations of substantial value. The penitentiary management and pris- repairing toys and the Boy ‘Scouts '@ substant help in collecting} Monte Carlo, Dec. 27.—(P)—All emanate. Monte Carlo was astir today at the “Working hand in hand with the! greatest coup of its history, not a Legion were members of the Legion! coup of the gaming table but the auxiliary. As always they supported} coup d'etat staged yesterday by movement whole-heartedly and] Prince Louis who suspended both in substantial manner, both by mak- | state and municipal councils and took donations and by personal labor. | away guarantees provided in the con- always, the auxiliary demonstrat- | stitution of 1911. it really is an integral part of/ Thus far the hubbub created by the Legion. prince's action has been principally talk, but the principality’s govern- ment has every one of its army of more than 100 mobilized to meet a possible emergency and put down any further rioting such as that of last Monday when Prince Louis returned from Paris, g gabe Z holiday campaign. If the words of the opponents of | said he and other mem- | Prince Louis and his summary treat- bers of the Legion post appre- {| ment of the acute political and econ- omic situation should develop into deeds within the next few days there is wide expectation that France will WARN HOUSEHOLDERS AGAINST RACKETEER Claim Alleged Vacuum Cleaner Agent Disappears, Takes Machines With Him A warning to householders to be-| jWare of the fraudulent vacuum cleaner repair man, a form of racketeering which has been increasing rapidly in many sections of the country, was issued today by H. P. Goddard, secre- tary of the Bismarck asssociation of commerce. Goddard has received a bulletin from the National Better Business Bureau which explains and warns against the practices of these “gypsy electricians.” Misrepresentation {s the basis of the fraud, the bulletin states. The “electrician” calls on the prospective victim and ascertains what type of Cleaner she owns. A “refect” is dis-| covered, and with apparently altru- istic motives the spurious agent volun- teers to return the machine to the factory for repairs free of charge. He then departs with the cleaner, leaving no address. He does not return. Neither does the cleaner. Legitimate representatives of well- known manufacturers and dealers have suffered along with household- ers from the activities of such men. The public is warned to use caution in dealing with men offering to re-! If an agent} calls and offers to repair your ma-' pair vacuum cleaners. chine, telephone the local office of the company he claims to represent and find out if he is an authorized representative, Goddard suggests. Two Bombs Explode in| { ‘DAKOTA MAN SEES KELLOGG RONORED P. O. Bugge of Bisbee Describes Presentation of Peace Prize In Letter In a letter to the Bismarck Trib- une, P. O. Bugge, Bisbee. North Da- kota, describes in detail the cere- | Mony attendant to the award of the j Nobel peace prize to Frank B. Kel- logg, former United States secretary of state, and to Archbishop Soder- | | blom, Swedish cleric. : Besides American Minister Philip |and Mr. Kellog, Mr. Bugge was the | only American present at the cere- mony. . |The presentation was made in the | hall of the Nobel institution and dig- | nitaries from a number of foreign | countries as well as members of the | Norwegian royal family were present. Members of the diplomacy included Mr. Philip, the American minister; Mr. Oldenberg, the Danish minister; M. Juanez, the French minister; Sr. Marsanich, the Italian minister; Herr Hempel, the German charge d’af- |faires and Citizen Mirny, the Rus- | sian charge d’affaires, Prime Minister Mowinckel of Nor- way spoke at length on the work of ; both recipients in furthering the in- | terests of international peace. At the conclusion of the address Professor Stang of the University of Norway approached a little table where the insignia and medals were kept in two boxes, each a foot in length. Picking one up, he presented | it to Mr. Kellog, saying, “I have the | honor of presenting to you the peace { Prize for 1929 in recognition of your epochal work for the promotion of world peace.” Mr. Kellog in his speech of acknowledgment expressed his high appreciation and gratitude for the gift. He said that it was more dear ; to him than anything that had been previously bestowed on him. He lauded both Norway and the late Mr. | Nobel for their work in the interests of peace, At the conclusion of Mr. Kellog’s address the orchestra struck up the “Star Spangled Banner,” Mr. Bugge | sald. i,000 ATTEND DEBUT of Mayflower Hotel in Washington Filled Washington, Dec. 27—()—A thou- OF HELEN L, DOHERTY Drawing Rooms and Ballrooms move troops into the principality and take over its administration, at least temporarily. | Prince Louis is known to be firmly convine: aco’s ills is for a bigger and better tourist season with more wealthy American and British spenders and that with recurrent political disorder there is little chance of this. A combination of the world-wid economic crisis and intensified com petition of other resorts has made the A Ci season loom none too favor- Alexander Paterson, Inciden-| able. Without visitors Monaco would starve and the prince feels that she Participated in a community effort in this city, McKinnon said. BRITON WILL VISIT tally, Hopes to See Alphonse | cannot afford the adverse publicity | Cc which further disturbances would apone ick: Alexander Paterson, @ mild manner- Mrs. Peter Anderson tania for a four months holiday inj Dies Here Yesterday! American penitentiaries. —_ Paterson is commissioner of prisons| Mrs. Peter Anderson, 31, of Eck- in England and he hopes to learn all | lund township, died here Friday aft- the new American trade secrets, wit- | er an illness of three weeks duration. ness an electrocution and meet Al/ Funeral services will be conducted | township; three small cial to study the American system in| daughters, Rose, one year old, Eliza- | I think it's about time.” | beth, four, and an infant, aged two | Back of his visit is a contemplated | months. eon ee ans to study th also pI st e ‘ s n programs of American / Undescribed Animal Is mass-feeding * | Sought in Queensland Chicago, naturally, he hopes to — | Capone and he doesn’t insist it] Brisbane, Australia, Dec. 27—()— jail. Capone, incidentally, is|In the mountain fastnesses of tropi- the English papers |cal Queensland, a country untrodden | more often than in American Jour-|by white men, roams possibly tne last nals. undescribed big animal in the world, | “I'd like to see what sort of a man} Professor A. 8. Le Souef, noted zo- he is,” Paterson said. “I also hope |ologist, in a lecture to the Naturalists’ to walk some in the streets of Chi-|society, said there was ample proof; cago”—this last somewhat seriously. |that a huge cat-like marsupial with | English prisoners ® striped stomach and fearsome ap-| Pearance existed in the Queensland; hinterland. Efforts will be made to capture one | of the strange creatures alive. —— | St. Louis Men Urge Three-Workday Week execution was to compare it with the English method. He intends to visit prisons from New England to California. Priests Are Released Following Massacre Kiukiang, China, Dec. 27—()— ‘The 14 Catholic Lazarist missionaries, society, the members of which would | pledge themselves to three days of cred, are safe in the Catholic mis- | work a week. . | Rohmann, retired contractor. It is their belief, they said, that the problems of unemployment and business would i ed the only remedy for Mon- | Peing the fourth | lost statues of the Parthenon, buried | guest list. |mear the Venerable ruin, has been Mrs. Doherty by-a previous marriage, | discovered by Professor Rys Carpen- |She has just returned from several | | ter, director of the American school | years spent in Europe studying arts * . Ts sand guests braved inclement weather Chicago During Night je vin: to steed ea eater —— society of Miss Helen Lee Eames exploded almost simultaneously on Doherty, New York. the north side last night, one of them | directed again: “big business” within recent weel One blew in the steel door of an apron factory and shattered plaster ing in an apartment across an alley. , broadest av Three persons in the apartment were | Vice Pre: slightly injured. The explosion was|Mrs. Dolly Gann, Secretary and Mrs. heard in Evanston, more than 10 | Hurley, numerous diplomats, senators miles away. and others whose names dot the pages Another bomb damaged a Chinese | of the social registers of Washington restaurant. Ten occupants were not |and New York, were there. injured but four of them, in a card! But gate crashers did not get in. A game, were knocked pecial detail of police guarded the EET ntrances, and unusual care was PARTHENON STATUE FOUND [dente to compare the invitations pre- ballrooms of the Mayflower Hotel. all hile outside their limousines ues, Athens, Dec. 27—(#\—One of the|sented with the names on the long for years in a pile of “junk” marble} Miss Doherty is the «daughter of of classical study here. CAPITOL THEATRE land languages. Saturday Daily 2:30-7-38 Adults 335c until 7:36 *~ Thrills - Action Suspense Chicago, Dec. 27.—Two bombs | Doherty, daughter of Mrs. Henry L. They filled the drawing rooms and, of them taken over for the affair,! | jammed traffic on one of the city's! lent Curtis, his sister, | AlL-Talking RCA Photophone MONDAY - TUESDAY - - DEC. 29-30 “Qutside the Law” With MARY NOLAN See this strange drama of love and loyalty among creoks in a drama that wrings the heart. WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY - - DEC. 31 - JAN. 1 “The Storm” The Dramatic Thriller of the Year The Next Legislative Session Officially Opens Tuesday, January 6, 1931 The coming three months will be important history for North Dakota. You will want to keep posted on legislative matters, to learn through our special staff of Capitol News Gath- erers the daily happenings and watch the trend of events as they are worked out by those to whom you have delegated these important tasks. The Bismarck Tribune Brings to your home each day the exact news of the legislative.assembly, uncolored, unbiased. The world’s important events from the Associated Press. Local news by a staff of competent reporters and The Tribune’s trade territory is covered by a staff of special representatives. This assures The Tribune’s leadership in reader interest in its territory. Six fine comics are published daily in addition to an editorial page cartoon, “Out Our Way,” and Major Hoople. 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