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‘SULLIVAN SPEAKS ~ RYTON DINER FOR COURT SQUAD Emphasizes ‘Responsibility of ‘Leadership Which Prowess Places Upon Boys ~ Belief that athletics drive home the fundamentals of good citizenship dn a. way every boy can understand ‘expressed Monday night by John basketball team and members of the Lions club. ‘a 5 Sullivan was the principal speak- er ona arranged by the Program ‘ Lions in honor of Bismarck’s team]. which was runner-up in the state tournament, held here recently. their schoolmates, Sullivan empha- sized the responsibility which this leadership entails. Other boys and the smaller children in the schools look up to those who play on athletic teams and model themselves after their heroes, Sullivan asserted. The themselves properly and set a-good example. Participation in athletics teaches a lesson to the players which is valua- ble in after life, he said, because it teaches a boy to take a “wallop on the chin and come up smiling,” ready to play and to try again. In a humorous vein, he entered a complaint by Mandan against what he termed the athletic dynasties of Bismarck ‘High school. For allnost as long as Mandan folks can remem- ber, he said, Bismarck’s teams have listed players by the same family name. “It seems we are always hav- ing to compete with the: Bensers,” Sullivan said. “No sooner had Eddie Spriggs quit causing us trouble than another edition of the same family, in the person of Johnnie Spriggs, turned: up to add to our woes. This is the third edition of the Browns to carry on the battle for Bismarck and the second edition of the Greens. We hope that after these families get through sending their sons into bat- tle against us, Mandan will ‘have a chance.” Sullivan congratulated the team members on the manner in which they lost to Fargo in the final game of the state tournament. The man who loses after he has done his best and. given everything he had _ has nothing to be ashamed of, Sullivan said, and deserves the plaudits of the crowd just as much as does the victor. ; Members of the, basketball squad present at the dinner were Lester Dohn, Wade Green, Harold ‘Tait, Eq- die Agre, John Spriggs, George Al- Jen and Dale Brown. Other guests from the high school were Superin- tendent H. O. Saxvik, Principal W. H. Payne, Athletic Director R. D. Mec- Leod, and Coaches George Hays, My+ *. ‘fon’ Anderson; A. C. Van “Wyk, George Schaumberg and Ed Heer. Adolf Engelhardt and Mrs. Grace Duryee Morris gave several instru- mental numbers and the KFYR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, APRIL 7, 1931 Two-Foot Television Pictures for __ ‘Home Reproduction Said Practical New York, ‘April 7.—(#)—Two- foot television pictures for home reproduction now are’ considered practical. Thus, pictures coming vig ether ‘waves can be run with ag much Previous apparatus designed for home experimentation has. been able to reproduce ‘pictures only a few inches square, an eight-inch ‘picture being considered: large. quartet sang two songs. Members of Belk. Miss‘\Helen House played the accompaniments, In a brief speech, D. E. Shipley, cfub president, suggested that ath- letes of the Bismarck high school might form the nucleus of a city baseball team which would reflect credit upon the community or that: the amateur athletes of Bismarck and Mandan might join to form a bi-city aggregation. A delegation of nine members from the Steele Lions club were ‘guests at the dinner. They were Hans, J. Lee, G. A. Anderson, Peter Dalenberg, R. W. Allen, Mac Epstein, E. Dannmyer, ioe Fred Janis and E'S, Wal- Other guests were C. J.’ Tullberg, C. BE. Lason and A, H. Galliger, Bis- * Announces Opening Of Office in City Constituents of the four gréat:ele- ments in nature, air, water, sun and the earth, absorbed by the body through external application, form the basis of the Class Health system according to a pamphlet issfied by A. L. Elvin who has announced ‘that he will open offices at 206 Main Avenue ‘Wednesday. ‘The minerals ‘and oils used in the system, Elvin said, contain the prin- cipal elements of the human body and when they are released upon the body at certain temperatures they are absorbed by the pores, purifying blood and supplying it with the ele- ments it needs, a With this ‘accomplished, health must inevitably follow, he, asserted. DOUG GETS 180 SUITS down a suit of clothes. Doug ° banks is back from a hunting trip with 180 suits presented by Mahara- In addition, the picture could be '| Montana total at least $12,309,708, ac- '| dent's receiving outfit in a small high- boy type of cabinet. MINSTER 1S MAKING SELF DBFENGE PLEA Says He Fatally Shot His Suc- cessor After Victim Threat- ened Him Nevada, Mo., Rev. J. A. Brown, former blacksmith, claimed spiritual*solace Tuesday as he awaited the filing of charges against him for the slaying of the 2 tae Rider, 43-year-old evan- gelist. “I stand acquitted before God,” the elderly, minister sald, asserting he shot in self defense. A coroners jury found the evange- list, fatally wounded at the minister's home Saturday, came to his death at Brown’s hands. ‘Webster Hallett, prosecuting attorney, said Brown would be tried on charges of first- degree murder. ‘Witnesses testified Brown, former pastor at o little log church at Hal- ley’s Bluffs, had rejected an invita- ton from Rider to conduct Easter services at the church and that their discussion led to blows. Brown charged Rider had threatened to take away his license to preach. Bernard Maddock, 16, . Suffers Broken Foot Friday when he was injured in an accident at the Maddock farm near Plaza. The boy was fell and crushed student at St. here and had gone to the home farm to spend his Easter vacation. Coal is found in almost all farts of Colombia, the resources of its better known region being estimated at 27,- (000,000,000 metric tons. April 7.—@}—The | $27,000. $12,399,708 TOBE SPENT IN MONTANA Emergency Building Plan Is Outlined by Chairman of Employment Committee cording to reports received by Colonel Arthur Woods, chairman of the prest- “aay committee for em- by department for post offices and other projects in Montana include: 4 Under contract: Havre, post office, $200,000; Lewistown, post office, $165,- 000; advertised for bids; Babb-Piegan, border station, $59,000. Plans being drawn: -Helena, post office, $340,000. Sites accepted: Anaconda, post of- fice, $140,000; Roosville, border sta- $59,000. Agent inspecting site: jweetgrass, border station, $61,000. The additional federal public build- ing program reported to congress Feb. 27 includes the following amounts authorized and ited. for post offices in Montana: Butte, $295,000; Billings $240,000; Havre, $250,000. +, Federal funds for use on Montana highways total $9,418,648, including both emergency and regular federal aid funds. Of this amount $4,441,886 is under construction, and $3,019,201 is available for new et apererr The bureau of 1: affaits “is constructing a building for employes at Blackfeet, to cost $12,000, and a power plant at Tongue River to cost The department of justice is nego- tiating for the purchase of a building at Billings, for use as a federal jail. As soon as title is acquired plants will be drawn for remodeling the building which it is estimated will cost be- ‘tween $50,000 and $60,000. For grading, surfacing and bridges on the Babb-Many Glacier road in Glacier park the National Park serv- ice has available $154,460. For the transmountain highwvy, there is available $828,500. For various con- struction and improvement projects in Glacier park, there is an allotment of $100,100. Halliday Declaimers To Seek New Laurels Halliday, N. D., April 7.—Speakers representing Halliday High School expect to uphold honors gained last year in declamatory contests to be held soon. A year ago the local in- stitution captured all the places in the state district declamatory con- test held at the Dickinson State Teachers college. Eleven students have entered this year's local contest and four of these will be selected to represent the school in the county contest. For the last two years, Halliday has won all Placed in the Dunn county compe- tition, according to H. N. Johnson, local school head. Spain captured Gibraltar from th> Moors in 1492 and held it until it was U.S. Submarine Nautilus (V-6) Sets {ACROBAT TRUE 10 New Navy Record for Deep Sea Diving Portsmouth, N. H., April 7.—(#) —The fleet submarine Nautilus (V-6), which Monday’ set a new U. 8. navy record for deep sea diving, was bound for the New York navy yard Tuesday for ex- amination. In her diving tests of the Isle of Shoals Monday she reached a depth of 336 feet, four feet lower than her sister shop, V-5, went. in a similar test last October. The U.'8. navy’s Nautilus, which bears the same name as that of a submarine Sir Hubert Wilkins plans to use in an under- seas polar expedition, ran the course and dived in the waters between Boone Island and Isle of Shoals for nearly three hours. She was in touch with the sub- marine rescue ship Falcon by means of an underwater sound and listening device during the tests. At 60 feet the ship rested three- quarters of an hour; at 180 feet, 20 minutes; at 238 feet, five min- utes; and at 283 feet 10 minutes. At: depths fanging from 313 feet to the record drop, tests of pumps ‘were made. Machinety was care-" fully observed, pumps were oper- ated and sea pressure was put on in a torpedo tube door in both the forward and after torpedo rooms. Lieutenant Commander Thom- ‘as'J. Doyle, in charge of the craft, and Commander E. L. Cochrane, superintendent of new construc- tion at the Portsmouth navy yard, supervised the tests. The Nauti- lus also had aboard five officers of the industrial department, draftsmen, and the ship's com- plement of eight officers and 80 men. She eventually will be bas- ed on at San Diego as a unit of submarine division 20. The sub- marine traveled 5,500 miles from the Pacific Coast to fhake Mon- “day's tests. ACTION ON FLOWERS CHARGES IS DELAYED Attorney for Ousted Secretary ‘Demands Client Have Chance to Be Heard St. Paul! April 7—(P)—The special legislative committee investigating affairs . of the state rural credit, bu- reau Monday decided in executive session to postpone until Friday a de- cision whether the investigation shall include charges that H. H. Flowers, ousted secretary, profited personally from insurance ‘payments made by the bureau. Representative John E. Regan, Mankato, counsel for Flowers, de- manded the committee investigate \the charges which were referred to M. F. Kinkead, Ramsey county at- Head colds Stop thtat first sniffle! Just put Mistol up your nose with the special Mistol dropper. Clear your head. Relieve inflammation. Check infection. Mistol will nip a cold in the bud. Get a bottle today, at any drug store. taken by the British t, under Ad- miral George Rooke during the Spanish Succession in 1704, Mistol : Ake. U.8.PAT.OFF. torney, by Governor Floya B. Olson in a letter more than a month ago. Regan declared that “Flowers has been called a thief and isn't being given an opportunity to repry” and asked that the group require tnat the governor's charges be laid before the committee arid that the former sec- retary be furnished the chance to “give his side of the story.” Senator R. C. Bell, Detroit Lakes, chairman, said the committee has re- frained from an inquiry into payment of insurance premiums, by the bureau on buildings on lands it has fore- Closed because; “we have not wanted to prejudice case of either Mr. Flowers or the state.” He said the tommittee has considered the case a grand jury matter but that if it has not been considered by the grand jury LNiortsens the committee might go CIRCUS TRADITION Carries on With Act Though His} Wife Lies Near Death in Hospital Los Angeles, April 7.—(#)—True to circus tradition, Alex Acezvo, carried on with his aerial acrobatic act Mon- day night while his wife, Auroria, 30, laynear death from a plunge to earth & few hours before. Acezvo, aided by others, pulled his wife to the top of the Al G. Barnes tent Monday. She and three others, suspended only by rubber mouth- pieces clamped between their teeth, began to spin rapidly in a “butterfly” act. Suddenly, Mrs. Acezvo dropped. Her husband ran forward to break her fall with his body, but she crash- ed limp at his feet. Acezvo walked across a slack wire high above the ground in perfect bal- ance at the night performance. Mrs. Acezvo still was unconscious at the Hollywood police emergency hospital early Tuesday. Attendants said her OPERATION Treat your scalp and dress your hair, Gives life and natural luster Keeps hair in piace For the entire family. 50¢ fuls in a Glass of Milk ‘That’sthe prescription thet has buile thing mother Know ebowe Thou. of chem have written us, call- P ing the results truly: ‘With meals—after school—at bed- time—is when children like it best. ‘With meals it helps digest other foods. After school it nourishes faggedlitrle bodies,yetleaves them gives » At bedeime it fed feeling thatalwaysputschildrentosleep. The CHOCOLATE MALTED MILK To Drink at Home IN ONE | skull and pelvis fractured. It had mined whether she lost swivel broke. i Coming Wednesday - Thursday ‘EXTRAVAGANCE’ Ultra-Smart Drama of Fashions and Passions | ANNOUNCING THE OPENING -- OF THE --- John F. Class HEALTH SYSTEM ry A Few of the Many Grateful Tributes to the John F. , Class Health Fume System ~ KIDNEY TROUBLE—A year ago while; suffering from an acute attack of kidney trouble dertul mineral relieved after bis i k it. andit is i ai 3 siti i E PLETE za ne Hh ! i E [ I started taking your won- fume baths and felt greatly the first’ six treatments, 1 continued taking the treatments for two mpathe Gnd wns otquplotely, cured of my am indeed li | g i ail i hi , Hi i NEW WAY TO HEALTH I INVITE YOU TO ATTEND THE OPENING OF THE BISMARCK JOHN F. CLASS HEALTH INSTITU- TION AT 206 MAIN AVENUE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8. RECEPTION HOURS 9 A. M. TO 9 P. M, The new John F, Class Health Institution is now ready for service. ‘I urge you to.attend the opening. In order that the opening day. visitors may inspect all parts ‘of the institution and examine equipment, no treatments will be given on In this Institution will be practiced:‘the same methods which have brought marvelous results in thousands of cases at the more than three hundred John F. Class Health Institutions of the United States and Canada. The opening affords you'a splendid opportunity to learn about the principles of the John F. Class Health System and to see how the treatments are given. Be sure to visit the Institution on the opening day, In. the effort to work out my own: éalvation from an “incurable” disease I discovered and designed the John F. Class Health System. this, too, despite the fact gratitude for Filled with unspeakable pleas 7 ca) anagement 0; . - what Health Fume ‘ wonderful achievement, .:Togay in ttion:.to announce vin, who has shown so Now, at the age of seventy, I am as hale and vigorousas the average man in his that my case was pronounced hopeless a score years ago. did for myself, I determined to give humanity the benefits of this for the application of my discovery dot the country. It gives me the opening of the, Health Institution in this city under much ability and sympathetic understanding in his