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, ! THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1931 WILL DISMISS CASES |f considers INVOLVING HEADS OF MARTIN STATE BANK Announcement made by Hugh McCulloch, Washburn, Coun- sel for Defense Washburn, N. D., Jan. 20.—(?)— Charges against three former officers of the closed Martin State bank will be dismissed as the result of the ac- quittal of J.:J. Breher, president of the bank, of a charge of accepting deposits in an insolvent bank, Hugh McCulloch, Washburn, who aided in the defense of Breher, ‘Tuesday. Breher, together with R. E. Daly, vice president and W. E. Daly, jer, was indicted by a Sheridan county grand jury for accepting de- posits in an insolvent bank. Breher also was indicted for embezzlement. Breher’s trial was considered a test case to determine if the prosecution would proceed with the other charges against him and the other men. The case was the last on’the calendar of the Eddy county district court, to which the trial was ‘transferred on & dl of venue. Breher was ac- quitted Sunday, after which adjourned for the term. Dismissal of the charges against the other men will take place at the next term of court, McCulloch said. ‘The prosecution felt that because of Breher's acquittal, it would be an unwarrented expense of money to attempt to proceed with the other cases, Breher declared. Breher was defended by McCulloch and John Sullivan, Mandan. George ‘Thom, McClusky, aided in the prose- cution. New York Builder Made Italian Count New York, Jan. 20:—(P)—Anthony Campagna, well-known New York builder and naturalized American citizen, has been made a count by the king of Italy. The title is believed to be the first of its kind ever con- ferred upon an Amgé ls ‘The degree was conferred in recog- nition of the Ameri¢an’s philal thropies in both his adopted and na- tive lands. ‘The title is hereditary and the de- cree conferring it carries the rare provision that it shall pass to both of : Mr, Campagna’s sons upon his death. ‘Thereafter only the first son in each lines hall inherit it. McClusky Farmer Is Dead from Abscess McClusky, N. D., Jan. 20.—Funeral services were held Monday afternoon in the German Baptist church south- “east of McClusky for Albert Lange, 38, who died suddenly last Friday afternoon at the George Fritz home in McClusky. Death was caused by ‘an abscess. * The services were conducted by Rev. H. G. Braun, pastor of the Bap- tist church and Rev. A. Gehring, pas- tor of the local Evangelical church. Albert Lange was a resident of Mc- Clusky for the past seven years, with the exception of one year, 1924, which was spent in Washburn. He was born at Emery, S. D., March 31, 1892. On December 2, 1915, Albert Lange and Emma Wahl were united in marriage. They were parents of four daughters, He was married in 1928 to Esther Diede, one son being born to this union. Surviving are his wife, father, four brothers and two sisters. Sees Vast Population For New York City New York, Jan. 20.—(?)—Visualiz- ing a population of 21,000,000 in the metropolitan area within 35 years, George McAneny, president of the Regional Plan association, warrs that New York must move to cope with it or face “creeping paralysis.” “Within 35 years this metropoltian district will be the scene of the most gigantic concentration of people, busi- ness and industry in the world,” he told the New York Credit Men's asso- ciation “Monday night. . Tea in Vacuum just like your coffee It is just as necessary for tea as it is for coftec. The U. S. Government Tea Examiners have urged it, and Schilling has dis- covered how to do it. The most delightful flavor of tea has always evaporated long before it could reach you in an ordinary tin or cardboard box. There was no way to prevent it. But: now Schilling has discovered how to keep tea’ fresh just like your coffee.Fra- grant flavors you never before tasted in tea, FRESH |S chilling Invitation , OLIVER EIELSON Oliver Eielson, brother of Car! Be": Eielson, noted arctic aerial explorer, is considering an invitation from sir Hubert Wilkins to go with him on a submarine voyage under the polar ice from Spitzbergen to Point Barrow, Meanwhile he is continuing his work as a member of the staff of the First Securities corporation, a subsi- diary of the First Bank Stock corpor- ation of which the First National bank of Bismarck is a member. Eiel- son has spent several days in Bis- marck recently and has made his headquarters at the local bank. This will be his custom on future trips to this city, bank officials said today. Hospital Praised by Sheridan County Man McClusky, N. D., Jan. 20.—Charles A. Schwartz, clerk of court, who re- cently returned from Fargo, where he was confined in the U. 8. Veterans’ hospital for several weeks following a Tnajor operation, is much improved. Mr. Schwartz speaks highly of the veterans’ hospital and the treatment accorded him while there. California Citrus Threatened by Cold Los Angeles, Jan. 20.—(?)—Smudge pots burned in southern California citrus groves early Tuesday. It was the second time tempera- tures had fallen below the freezing Point since the last cold snap which’ ended January 2. Monday a low of 27 degrees was offset by the smudge pots, with no damage resulting, and Tuesday morning’s nip was no more severe, Bishop Cannon’s Son Marries in Washington P. Cannon, son of Bishop James Can- non, Jr., was married last Saturday to Miss Margaret Lee Fultz, Wash- ington. The marriage was not announced and the ceremony was attended only by a brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Cannon. The groom is a law student at George Washing- ton university. The bride's father is Rev. R. L. Fultz, Front Royal, Va. HAIR HEALTH begins in the roots. for life and natural luster treat your scalp and dress your hair in one operation. For the entire family. YANKS 505 Look for the Sign C. C. C. on ‘Main Avenue The Capital Commercial College 31414 Main Ave. Phone 121 Bismarck, North Dako‘a We do PUBLIC STENOG- RAPHY, MIMEOGRAPHING, TYPING, CARBON COPY WORK, etc. at a nominal cost in order to give our students practical experience. And we do tt right. ‘We have enrolled many new students since the holidays. One came from the South High school, Minneapolis; one from the ‘Inter-Stat> Business college of Fargo; another from the Da- kota Business college of Fargo; another from the State Agricul- tural college of Fargo; another from Madison, Wis. Which proves what? Well, we have a pretty -good Commercial College here in Bismarok. ’ Better times are coming. We have had two years of “Depres- sion” and it seldom lasts longe: than that.. We will have .a num- ber of bright, well-trained sec- spi Gladys Ellison passed a fair tost of 160 words a minute in original dictation without an error. This is the highest test wehave had ity to make one of the fastest ‘shorthand writers in the north- west, and an excellent reporter. Miss Florence Dohaney. of Bis- marck is almost as rapid. Call us if you will need office help. We have DAY and. EVENING classes all the year round. Come to a school where you get the closest personal attention and the most individual hetp. W.- keep @ teacher for every twenty students, not one tencher to the hundred 9s. most ‘business col- leges .do. Call or write for COURSE OF STUDY and. full * information. PROF. R.'E, JACK, Principal} Washington, Jan. 20.—(?)—Davie; passed. Mirs Ellison has the abtl- {i [BUSINESS OUTLOOK IS HELD IMPROVED Commentator Notes Gains in Sentiment and in Actual Transactions Improvement in. the business out- look is noted in the weekly survey by the R. G. Dun company. In its sum- mary published today this commenta- tor on business says: “Having begun with more encour- aging indications in some. quarters, the new year has passed its first fort- night with an extension of the gains in sentiment and in actual business in certain channels. Nothing has oc- curred to alter the belief that revival will come slowly arid not in all trades |simultaneously, yet the hopeful por- ,tents have attained somewhat more prominence. A strengthening of the foundation for commercial recovery ‘was affected by the sweeping read- justments of 1930, and an ultimate re: sponse to the changed phases is fore- shadowed. It is chiefly in the im- proved outlook that the general situ- ation is more favorable, although the specific instances of increasing trans- actions are significant. , “Without distegarding the seasonal aspect, it is important that produc- tion in some basic industries has risen substantially, with steel mills operat- ing at @ rate which, while still rela- tively low, is apparently above the re- cent minimum. Such a trend reflects @ higher scale of activity in other | demands from railroads, and many thousands of workers have been re- ~|engaged since the turn of the year. “The public buying power, as dis- closed by retail distribution, naturally has shown geographical variations, yet the rise in employment, even if more or less restricted in area, is con- structive. A sharp drop in tempera- tures this week tended to augment the sale of winter merchandise, but econ- omy among many consumers and their reduced purchasing capacity limit the turnover in the retail field. The more attractive prices offered in the stores, however, act es a stimulus, while the reported small stocks of ers for purposes of replenishment. the movement of wholesale commod- ity quotations, and Dun’s comprehen- sive list has made a better showing since January opened. Afver many months of persistent weakness, with lines of manufacture and also heavier | goods are leading to orders from deals ne populace has suffered and there “A point of great interest in the! prevailing unusual circumstances is; Seriously Ill Se i ¢ Major General Clarence R. Edwards, commander of New England’s Yan- kee Division in the World war, is ser- jously ill at Massachusetts General hospital, Boston, where he recently | underwent an emergency operation. Latest bulletins from the hospital said that he was “resting comfort- ably” but that there was no change in his condition. its attendant unsettlement, any last: ing gain in the steadiness of markets would be decidedly helpful. With business not yet fully adjusted to the new conditions resulting from @ prac- tion, there are, nevertheless, some dis- tinct signs of progress in the right di- rection.” Chinese Bandits Slay, Wound 400 Persons Kweiteh, China, Jan. 20.—(P)— | Bandits killed and wounded 400 per- sons and kidnaped 1,000 others in capturing and looting a town 20 miles south of here Tuesday. diers about the town did not oppose the outlaws. This and other parts of Honan province continued in the grip of the coldest spell experienced in 20 years. have been many deaths. BONUSES FOR WOUNDS Nanking, Jan. 20.—(?)—Nationalist soldiers get bonuses for wounds. The amounts range from $100 per wound for a general down to $5 for a private. A $6.60 Attraction at popular prices. & Gordon, Capitol | HAMBURGER B30" 12d FRANKFURTERS Mirae si: 164c PORK SHANKS !20,Moue? Pisses" 9906 SHORT RIBS Tite! sity Baby Be 13c HP VEAL STEW Fat So Abe * MIN he cies bs erakiteoese s 1s $a c An ha LS, The laugh tornado that cost New Yorkers $6.60 a seat now showing America’s loveliest beauties; the most daz- aling of spectacles and comedy’s peak funster in the merriest myth ever told. A wonder of Founded upon the stage play by Owen Davis entitled “THE NERVOUS WRECK” Based upon the story “THE WRECK” by E. J. Rath in col- laboration with Robert H. Davis. Produced on the stege by Lewis WEDNESDAY SPECIALS INSPECTED MEATS dene by WALTER GUS KAHN Gran he WILLIAM ANTHORT the GUI TECHNICOLOR United Artists Picture Performances: 2:30 - 7 - 9 Daily Tonight - Tomorrow and Thursday Adults 50c Entire Evening Theatre tically world-wide economic transi-| The military garrison of 10,000 sol-| "ICREAMERY AT DRAKE!” MAKES YEAR REPORT 1930 Statement of Cooperative Shows 161,000 Pounds of Butter Was Made (Tribune Special Service) | Drake, N. D., Jan. 20.—At the first | | annual meeting of the Drake Cooper- | ative Creamery held Monday, the an- nual report discloses that 161,900 Pounds of butter was made during the last year at a production cost ot 4.73 per pound. u Statistics compiled by the company auditor show assets of $20,000, lia- bilities of $3,000 and paid up stock of $13,000 as well as $1,200 set aside for surplus. Patronage dividends paid totaled $3,215 and a six per cent stock dividend also was declared. A resolution favoring a higher state tax on oleomargarine was passed and copies were mailed to the legislative Gairy committee. Another resolution advocating reasonable commercial truck legislation also was passed. Three new directors, elected at the meeting were Frank Eichhorn, Ted Sitz, and Richard Nisson. Fort Lincoln Soldier Sent Back to School A Fort Lincoln soldier, who is | former local boy, was committed to, the state training school at Mandan | Monday afternoon by Judge Fred Jansonius after he had confessed to the theft of an automobile belonging | to W. B. McKee, Towner oil sales- | man. The youth was apprehended by Mc- Kee, himself, after he found that his, car had been taken from in front of | the Patterson hotel. He immediate- ly chartered a taxicab and instituted | @ search for the missing car. | He discovered the thief on the Me-| ' Joins Old Cronies ¢ It will seem like old times to Navy Bill Ingram, above, when he ushers Jobless Mob Raids Oklahoma City Store men raided a grocery store within three blocks of the city hall, here| “uesday and seized food, charge of the situation and made wholesale arrests. ‘School Notes LONG LAKE Marjorie Edson spent Christmas | i -—— ° | vacation with her aunt, Mrs. Hughes, in Bismarck. Norma Hill is back in school. She was absent many days before vaca- ‘ion because of her mother’s illness. Over 20 young people went skating da Long Lake Thursday night. Wilhelmina Moffit was absent from school because of illness. Bernace Edson has left for Bis- marck where she spent the week-end. Jimmie Nichol was pushed off a cement railing and broke his arm. He was taken to the hospital in Bis- his first Californfa eleven into the | ™marck. Pacific Coast Conference race next fall. Though Bill will be new in the far west, he will be among old friends, for Jones of Southern California, Phelan of Washington, Spears of Ore- gon and Spaulding of U. C. L. A, were coaching Big Ten teams when he coached Indiana from 1923 through 1925. morial highway driving toward Bis- marck and recovered his car, turning the driver over to the police. After being taken into custody, the | youth admitted he was a fugitive from the state training school and that after escaping from the institu- tion last March he joined the army. He gdve his age as 17, saying that he had lied about his age to gain admittance to the army. Judge Jansonius ordered him re- turned to the training school. He Puri LUCKIES are always kind to your throat Everyone knows that sun- shine mellows—that’s why the “TOASTING” process includes the use of the Ultra Violet Rays. LUCKY STRIKE =the finest ciga- rette you ever smoked, made of thefinest tobaccos — the Cream of the Crop=THEN=“IT'S TOASTED.” Everyone knows that heat puri- fles and so “TOASTING” =that extra, secret process = removes i harmful irrita ’ ¢hroat irritation and coughing. @ 1931, The American Tobscce Ce.. Mira. Staten Midsker left during vaca- tion for Novelty, Missouri, where he will make his future home. BALDWIN George Poole wrote state comple- tion examinations this week for the eighth grade and Emma White for the seventh grade. Lillian Gahrke and Emma White who expect to fin- jish the eighth grade at the close of | | the school year wrote on the exami- | ‘nations for practice. | son, Doris Poole, and Norman Fricke Mabel Ander- took the seventh grade examinations. Mrs. A. R. Lenihan ‘was a visitor at the school Wednesday morning. Pupils of the second grade have completed the work of making “Safety Books” this week. They are illustrated with colored pictures. Elda Hogue has been absent from school all this week owing to a bad cold. Students in the upper art: classes |r a fo | Okla., Jan. 20.—() | School Friday 1 he ne loyed Nearly a thousand unemploye | eabned to 1 this s A hundred police and scores of} other city and county officers took) ave nearly completed their work on drawing illustrating the principles proj Florence and Harry re- after an extended holiday vacation caused by @ siege of chicken pox. EDUCATOR IS DEAD New York, Jan. 20.—(?)—Dr. - ard B, Moore, dean of science at Pure due university, Lafayette, Ind., died | Tuesday at Memorial hospital. He i] was 59. He was stricken with brain cancer last October., Hoax—I hear Clarabel lost her breach of promise suit. Joax— Yes, her heart action was weak.—The Pathfinder. COITRE VANISHES “IN 4 WEEKS” Avoid Dangerous Operation! Home Treatment. Get Free Book “Your four weeks home treatment ended my soitre." Mrs. J. M. Spencer, Attica, Ohio. “My doctor ‘said operate. But your treatment I ended -goitre a3 in 1 month, That was 3 years ago. Goitre has never returned."—Mra. W. A. Pease, Creston, B.C. 200,000 others have treated goitre at home by this harmless, eas method. Ends goitre quic without danger or o tion. “Many say they had tried other methods in vain, But this metho aa ended goitres— often in Usiy Goitre Gone only 4 weeks. Method explained in big, iflus- trated 44 page FREE BOOK by eminent | Battle Creek Goitre Specialist. Send for book today. Learn how to end goitre quick. FREE— Send No Mon iis Treatment and Advisory Co. Sanborn Bidp., Battle Creek, mich. © Send ma #REE book How to End Goltre Quick @ | at Home without Dagger or Operation. ' it ssi earear eniiahimbibainioa sl — = at fies nts that cause SUNSHINE MELLOWS The advice of your physician is: Keep out of doors, in the open air, breathe deeply; take plenty of exercise in the mel- low sunshine, and