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| MEXICO ENTERTAIN, ~NEW YORK GOVERNOR , Where he stopped Monday, Roosevelt | was to receive New Mexico's offictat| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1982 3 DEMOCRATS OF NEW Roosevelt Hopes to Swing Southern State Back to His Party’s Column Roosevelt Special En Route to Col- orado Springs, Sept. 27.—(7)—New Mexico, the earliest-settled of the ¢ States of the union and the smallest in population he will visit on this campaign trip Tuesday was host to the Democratic presidential nominee, Governor Franklin D .Roosevelt of New York. Swinging east from Williams, Ariz. welcome at Lamy Junction, a few miles from the old capital city, Santa Pe. At Albuquerque, Governor Arthw Seligman, U. S. Senator Samuel Brat- ton and the state's lone congressman. Dennis Chavez, all Democrats, will board the train and continue on to Lamy, where the delegates to the par- ty'’s state convention will be gath- ered. The convention meeting at Santi Fe will recess to meet the party’ standard-bearer. New Mexico's other U. S. senator,; Bronson Cutting, an Independent Re- publican, has been identified in th> U.S. senate with the group of which Senator George Norris, of Nebraska. is a leader. Senator Norris is sup-| porting Roosevelt, and Wednesday will meet the governor at McCook,| Neb. New Mexico voted for Woodrow Wilson in 1912 and 1916, but in 1920, 1924 and 1928 it was in the Republi- can column on presidential elections. Mrs. Roosevelt, who joined the gov- ernor at Williams, will continue wit him through the remainder of the trip to Albany, which will be reached Oct. 3. Monday the governor and his wife spent at the ranch home of Mrs. John C. Greenway, Arizona national com- mitteewoman. A rodeo attended by several thousand persons, including pS EEE ETO ‘| Weather Report | SORE -——© FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity Fair to- night and Wednesday; not so cool to- FAIR night, cooler Wed- nesday. - For North Da- kota: Fair to partly cloudy to- { night and Wed: nesday; not s cool tonight, cool- and north por- 1 tions. For South Da- i kota: Generally} fair tonight and! Wednesday; not! so cool tonight! portions, possibly | warmer Wednesday | west and north southeast, | Fair tonight and! | sday; slightly warmer tonight | east and extreme south portions, | For Minnesota: Generally fair in south, partly cloudy in north tonight and Wednesday; slightly cooler in ex- j |treme northeast and extreme south-; east, not so cool in northwest tonight. | light to locally heavy frost tonight in, east; slightly warmer Wednesday in south portion. GENERAL CONDITIONS | The low pressure has moved east- ward and is centered over the lower Lake Region. The attendant 24 hour; precipitation has covered the greater portion of the upper and lower Mi sissippi Valley and the Lake Region. High pressure covers the western half of the country being accompanied by fair cool weather. Temperatures have risen generally except for the Missis- sippi Valley and immediately sur- rounding territory where falls inj temperature of over 10 degrees were reported from most stations. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 0.1 ft.| 24 hour change, 0.0 ft. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.35. Reduced to sea level, 30.17. TEMPERATURE At 7 a. m. Highest yesterday . Lowest last night PRECIPITATION Amt. 24 hrs. ending 7 a. m. Total this month to date .. Normal, this month to date ... Total, Jan. 1 to date .. Normal, Jan. 1 to date Accumulated deficiency since BISMARCK, peldy. er Wednesday west | tinguished persons who received their “|persons able to furnish other names )|and data of prominent men and wo-; ROOSEVELT CH The democratic presidential nomin thopedic hospital in Seattle, (Associated Press Photo) EERS SEATTLE Gov. Franklin D, Roosevelt, i CRIPPLED CHILDREN js shown during his visit to an or where he cheered crippled children during a stop on his western campaign tour Six More Names Added — ROQSEVELT-GARNER To N. D. Hall of Fame CLUB FORMED HERE Three Engineers, Artist, Design- er and Attorney Are In- cluded in List Six new names have been added by _;Miss Bertha R. Palmer, state super- intendent of public instruction, to the list of former North Dakotans who , make up “North Dakota's Hall of| Fame. The “Hall of Fame” consists of dis- | education in North Dakota public schools and with the new additions contains 21 names of men and women whose achievements have been out- lined by Miss Palmer for use in Edu-/ cational week programs Nov. 7 to 13.) Miss Palmer Tuesday urged that special work in designing in Paris in 1924 and 1925. Since then she has/ done dress designing for prominent | iress firms in New York and is now! with Simpson and Sadosky, makers of Junior League frocks in New York city. She usually goes twice a year to the Paris openings at the expense of the company and buys imports on the trips; she has made nine round- trips across the ocean. Her salary) at present is $10,000 a year. The Kops | family is living in Lawton. | Dismisses Charge of Arson in Minot Court: Minot, N. D., Sept. 27.—(#)—Dis- | missal of a charge of arson against | Lionel Johnson of Minot, in connec- | tion with a fire which destroyed a racehorse barn at the fair grounds| Members of All Parties Unite to Support Candidacy of Democrats Organization of a Burleigh County Roosevelt-Garner club was effected at a meeting Monday night in the World War Memorial building of approximately 100 local citizens. Chris Bertsch, Burleigh county De- mocratic state committeeman, was elected chairman of the club with Leonard H. Miller as secretary, Mrs. Katherine Griffin, vice chairman, and Mrs. L. H. Cook, vice chairman for Burleigh county. Named as mem- bers of the club executive committee were Roy Neff, Finley Baker, Rita Murphy, Dan Hall and Tom Lee. Persons who had, in the past, as- ‘CANADA HAS SHIPPED| BiG WHEAT SUPPLIES TO CHINA RECENTLY: Information Published as U. S. Attempts to Make Big Deal in Orient Calgary, Alta, Sept. 27.—()—Re- ports that American farmers were trying to finance the sale of more! than 15,000,000 bushels of wheat to China were followed Tuesday with, an announcement that the Alberta Wheat Pool had sold more than 600,- | 000 bushels in China in the last week. It was announced definitely the Pool had disposed of two shiploads of wheat to Chinese importing com- panies, and it was unofficially learn- ed another shipload was sold during the week-end. There was no official announce- ment as to the amount of wheat in- volved, but unofficial reports had it 500,000 bushels; it also has been gen- erally accepted here that the Sask- atchewan wheat pool had made sales of wheat in China during the last six weeks. WINNIPEG CONFIRMS REPORTS OF SALES Winnipeg, Sept. 27.—()—Confir- mation of reports the Alberta Wheat Pool had sold two shiploads of wheat to China in the last week was ob- tained in grain trade circles here. The pool shipments are by no means the only ones sold for export to Shanghai, however. Sales altogether will approach eight or nine shiploads. Practically all of the wheat is from the 1932 crop and the orders call for grades No. 2 and No. 3 northern. The only 1931 crop wheat now in store at Vancou- ver is No. 1 northern and No. 1 hard. | Wealthy Indian in ‘ Court Once More | Los Angeles, Sept. 27.—(P)—A 90-year-old Creek Indian, Jack- son Barnett, who signs checks for Mother usual cathartic. You'll be rid of all that Poisonous waste, and you haven’t weakened the howels. You'll have a’ better appetite, and feel better in every way. The constant use of cathartics is often the cause of a sallow complexion and lines in the face. And so unnecessary! Would you like to break eee of the cathartic habit? At the same time building health and vigor that protects you from frequent sick spells, headaches, and colds? Get a big bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin today. Use often enough to avoid those attacks of constipation. When you feel weak and run-down or a coated teaete or bad breath warns you the bowels need to be stimulated. Give it to children instead of strong laxatives that sap their strength. It isn’t expensive. ROCKNE SPONSORED AND 6 ps woman who gives her organs the right stimulant need not worry about growing old. Her system doesn’t stagnate; her face doesn’t age. She has the health and “pep” that come from a lively liver and strong, active bowels. When you're sluggish and the system needs help, don’t take a lot ct “patent medicines.” ‘There’s a famous doctor’s prescription for just such cases, and every druggist Keeps this standard preparation. It is made from fresh laxative’ herbs, active senna, and pure pepsin. Just ask for Dr. Caldwell’s syrup pepsin. Take a little every day or so, until every organ in your body feels the big improvement. ‘The next time you have a bilious headache, or feel all bound-up, take this delicious syrup instead of the in Minot last Feb. 5, was ordered by | Justice O. O. Vold Monday at the | S0clated with many different political conclusion of a preliminary hearing. | Parties or factions were present to Three other persons face arson|Unite under the Roosevelt-Garner thousands of dollars with a thumb print, Tuesday was in- volved in another legal fight over his wealth, derived from fen who should be listed in the “Hall of Fame” to communicate the infor- mation to her. She desires to compile Amenia, clear Beach, cldy. Bottineau, peldy. Carrington, clear the party leaders of Arizona, was the feature of the day's events. The gov- ernor, sitting on top of a seat in an GUARANTEED BY STUDEBAKER open car, watched the races and chat- ted with hundreds who crowded by his machine. To one man who handed him a piece of petrified sponge, he remark- ed: ell use this to clean the white house.” Dense clouds of dust thrown up by Crosby, clear Devils Lake, peldy, Dickinson, cldy. Drake, cldy | Dunn Center, Ellendale, clear Fessenden, peldy Grand Forks, clea Hankinson, cldy. ... ‘the flashing hooves of the racing| Jamestown, peldy. . brochos settled of the governor and his party. but he remained until the last event. In a brief speech to the crowd, he) * said, “a lot of questions are being ask-| ed that I am not answering.’ “Yesterday.” he continued, “some; of our Republican friends suggestet that we would let Argentine beef and) Australian and Mexican beef come in free of duty. I don’t think that needs ‘an answer. We are going to look aft- er our own people.” \ The special train is scheduled to! sreach Colorado Springs at 9 o’colck Tuesday night, stopping at Las Vegas./ N. M., La Junita and Pueblo, Colo., en route. North Dakota A.P. | Has Annual Meeting) Fargo, N. D., Sept. 27.—(?)—North | Dakota members of the Associated) Press held their semi-annual meet- ing Tuesday with three directors of} state daily newspapers on the pro- |S gram. | M. M. Oppegaard of the Grand Forks Herald, discussed “Libel Laws”; Earle Tostevin of the Mandan Daily Pioneer, “State Sports,” and H. D. Paulson of the Fargo Forum, “Tele- graph Service including Sports.” H General discussion of the speak-| ers’ topics, election of officers and| @ luncheon were scheduled. P. R. Trubshaw, publisher of the Valley City Times-Record, presided. Mrs. William Borah Continues to Gain) Boise, Idaho, Sept. 27. P)—Hope | for the recovery of Mrs. William E.) Borah was increased Tuesday by suc-| cessive physicians’ bulletins indicat-| ing she was slowly gaining in the| struggle against psittacosis, or par-' rot fever. Improvement was noted through; Monday and at midnight Dr. Ralph} Falk reported she had maintained) her gains against the disease though her heart muscles still were weak. ‘Dr. Falk said five injections of| serum brought by airplane from Washington, D. C., and Pasadena, Calif, have been administered. U. S. MISSIONARIES ESCAPE Chefoo, China, Sept. 27.—(?)—Six! Americans were resting here Tues-|® day after a 150-mile trip afoot through quagmires in escaping from Chinese bandits who attacked their mission quarters at Laichowfu. They are: Rev. and Mrs. Ivan Larson, their two children, and Dr. Jeanette Beall, all of Kansas City, Mo., and Miss Alda Grayson, Rutherfordton, N. C. INGERSOLL FORTUNE SMALL New York, Sept. 27—(#)—The fortune that Robert H. Ingersoll made with the “dollar watch,” reput- ed at one time to have exceeded five million dollars, had dwindled to an estate of $257,295 at the time of his death in 1928, an accounting filed in surrogate’s court showed Tuesday. Unfortunate investments, it was in- dicated, had reduced the estate. VON GRONAU AT MANILA Manila, Sept. 27.—(?)— Captain ‘Wolfgang von Gronau landed his completing the first direct flight to Manila from Hong Kong. The Ger- man aviator made the flight in 6 1-2 hours. CHURCHILL: HAS RELAPSE ._ 27.—()}—Winston |Edmonton, ‘Alta., cldy. ;South Halsted street, obtained loot Larimore, clear .. ; Lisbon, clear . Max, peldy. Minot, clear Napoleon, cldy. Oakes, clear . Pembina, clear Williston, eldy. Wishek, clear Moorhead, Minn GENERAL High Low Ins. 54 clear 56 Other Stations— Boise, Idaho, clear ‘algary, Alta., peldy Chicago, Ill., eldy. . Denver, Colo., clear Des Moines, Ia., clear. . Dodge City, Kan., clear Havre, Mont., clear. Helena, Mont., clear . Huron, S. D., clear. Kansas City, Mo., rain. . Miles Cit font., clear les Salt Lake City, U., clear Seattle, Wash., Sheridan, Wyo. Sioux City, Ia., clear... Spokane, Wash., clear.. Swift Current, S., clear The Pas, Man., clear... Toledo, Ohio, peldy.. Winnipeg, Man., clear $49,950 IN LOOT Chicago, Sept. 27.—(P)}—The gun- men who recently rifled the safe de- Posit vault of Koch & Company, in of $49,950 in cash bonds and jewelry, it was revealed Tuesday in a report submitted by investigators to police commissioner James P. Allman. Ten members of two families were held prisoners by the robbers. Estimates) f the loss at the time of the tnevt ran as high as $250,000. LIGGETT NEEDS ECONOMY Chicago, Sept. 27.—()—Reorgani- zation faces the Louis K. Liggett company, who operates a chain of 555 drug stores throughout the United States, unless it can secure drastic reductions in rentals, George Gales, president of the company, said Tues- day. o— Opposes Watson { | Frederick Van Nuys, above, Den: cratic nominee for the senate in I: diana, is waging a hot campaig against Senator James E. Watson, Republican floor leader in the senate and candidate for reelection. Van ;@ complete list of persons educated l'the Art Institute in Chicago became | bis ambition. .|world. His studio is located at 47 1907, and his L. L. B. in 1908. |He was instructor in law at Yale in ‘00 recently he was a member of the law |The | Kops, designer, was born at Michigan in North Dakota schools and now; outstanding in their work. | The new names are: H Emile Walters, artist, born of Ice-} landic parents in Winnipeg, Canada, | Jan. 31, 1893. He came to North Da- kota in 1898 and grew up near Gardar in Pembina county, where he herded cattle when not in school. He was especailly fond of reading and the} cattle were neglected at times. At 14 he first began to handle colors as ap- Prentice to a house painter. Colors and color effects fascinated him, and After thrée years in Chicago he went to New York cit His paintings are classified as impre: onistic in a high key of color and ght, and his canvases are found inj the greatest art collections in the Fifth avenue, New York city, J. F. T. O'Connor, orator and law- yer, was born in Lanark, Ontario, Nov. 10, 1884. He came to North Da- kota, attending the public schools, the university, and received his B. A. in In 1909 he received L. L. B. and M. A. degrees from Yale, where he won the Towsend oratorical contest that year. 1910-12. He returned to Grand Forks, where he was engaged in the practice of law and farming for 10 years, He left the state some years ago and went to the Pacific coast, where until firm of William G. McAdoo, Richard C. Hutchinson, Herbert Miller Hutchinson and Harold L. Hutchinson, engineers, graduated from LaMoure high school in 1906, 1912 and 1919. Herbert was born in Ohio, but when two years old came to a farm near Great Bend. His brothers were born on a farm east of Dickey. All three attended country schools. All three studied engineering at*the state university, but Richard left to serve oversease.and upon graduation Her- bert went to France in aviation. The three are with the Hutchinson-Miller Construction company, which in 1930 completed the $6,000,000 Bonnet Carre spillway 30 miles north of New Or- leans, built by the U. S. government following the great Mississippi flood. The project required, excavating 160,- 000 cubic yards of dirt; setting three- quarters of a million square feet of solid steel sheet piling; pouring 135,- 000 cubic yards of concrete into a seamless block of synthetic stone a mile and a half long. Such a job in- volved days and nights of figuring with slide rule and logarithm table. Before beginning the excavation it was necessary to build a small city with graveled streets, light and power, water and sewerage. general store, ant hospital with treatment, dental and X-ray equipment. The story of build- ing the great spillway told by Maj. Gen, Lytle Brown, chief of engineers of the U. S. army, appeared-in the scientific monthly, June, 1930, and was condensed in the July Readers’ Digest. Hutchinson-Miller Construction company is now fulfilling contracts in Louisiana and Florida. Marguerite L, De Bruyn: (Midge) City, June, 1903, She was graduated from the model high school of the university in 1920 and from the uni- |by fire the charges arising out of the partial | destruction of the Home hotel here | same night, it being the} supposition of authorities that the | fairgrounds fire was intended as a “decoy” to get the fire department away from the Home hotel. | Those charged with arson, in con- | nection with the hotel fire, are Mrs. Hatti Handy, James Morrow and C./ E. “Eddie” Norris. Dismissal of the charges was ord- | Coyle, counsel for Johnson, which was not opposed by States Attorney isappointed by the testimony. Morrow and Mrs. Handry are at) liberty under bonds awaiting trial in | district court. The arson warrant never has been served on Norris, an / inmate of the Atlanta federal peni-| tentiary serving a sentence for vio-; lating the prohibition laws. i Three Are Injured In Auto Accident; One man was critically injured and two others were cut and bruised; when an automobile crashed into a pit on a praigie road near Hensler at about 2 a. m. Tuesday. The injured are Raphael Braun, Hensler, who sustained concussion of | the brain; Victor Friesz, Judson, who! suffered severe lacerations to the| face and scalp; and Casper Berger,! Mandan, who was cut and bruised. | They were brought to a local hos- pital after the accident. Braun still was unconscious eight hours after the mishap. The accident occurred when the automobile in which the three were riding was driven into a pit which once had served as a basement for a} farmhouse. The least severely injured of the three, Berger, was able to leave the hospital Tuesday. Although badly cut, Friesz's condition was satisfac- tory, his attending physician said. Begin Search for Grasshopper Eggs Extent to which North Dakota soils are infested with grasshopper eggs is being determined in a survey begun! near Bismarck this week by F. D. Butcher, entomologist of the United States department of agriculture in co-operation with county agents and J. A. Munro, agricultural college en- tomologist. { Every county will be included in the checkup, which probably will be com- | pleted by the middle of November. Egg pods deposited in the soil/by adult hoppers during the last season have been reported as exceedingly numerous in many parts of the state. Information obtained through this, survey will provide a gauge whereby | the probable infestation for next year | can be determined. | Soil samples from representative | areas in each county are being ex- amined and the extent of infestation 4s to be estimated from these. Sell your live poultry arid cream now to Armour Cream- versity in 1924, and took one ‘year’s ,eries, Bismarck. NOTICE To the Public The City of Bismarck will dis- ered by the justice on motion of J. J.! banner, sponsors of the club said. F, 8, Hudson, Democratic chair- man for Morton county and Judge James Campbell, old-time Democrat, were present from Mandan. Mrs. Howard Wood, Fargo, who is organizing Roosevelt-Garner clubs in this section of the state, presented the purposes of the proposed club. R. B. Murphy gave a brief address in support of the Roosevelt-Garner candidacy, emphasizing the differ- ences in governmental policy as pro- ‘posed by the Democratic standard- ;bearers and as practiced by the Paul Campbell, who said he had been ;P™esent, administration. W. H. Keyser, Selfridge, expressed the hope that Roosevelt-Garner clubs could be organized in every precinct of Sioux county and said he would be willing to assist in the organiza- tion effort. Proposal to open a Burleigh coun- 'y headquarters for the club to jhandle campaign work in this terri- tory was discussed and the matter was referred to the club's executive committee. FIND ANOTHER BOMB Chicago, Sept. 27.—(?)—Discovery of another bomb following informa- tion received in an anonymous tele- Phone message, gave police new hope| Tuesday they may be able to find the} terrorists who recently bombed the home of Judge John P. McGoorty. The bomb was found Monday night in the rear of a reputed beer flat after an unidentified man telephoned the police. EMPLOY SOCIAL WORKER Minot, N. D., Sept. 27.—(#)—Deci- sion to employ Miss Jessica Lowry of Minneapolis as a social service work- er in charge of poor relief adminis- tration in Minot, was reached at a joint mecting of members of the city commission and officers of the Ward county chapter of the Red Cross Monday. Miss Lowry, who came to Minot for the meeting, is to report for duty Oct. 1. REGISTRATION INCREASES Minot, N. D., Sept. 27.—()—Regis- tration at the Minot teachers college Oklahoma oil lands. Barnett was in court with his wife, Mrs. Anna Laura Lowe Barnett, as a result of the U. S. government's effort to force re- storation of $1,000.000 to the In- dian’s estate. Of the amount, $550,000 allegedly was given by Barnett to his wife. While Barnett, adjudged an in- competent several years ago, ap- peared bewildered at the proceed- ings in the U. S. commissioner's court, Mrs. Barnett was defiant and once marched her husband out of the court room. “I will not give my deposition,” “Til see PLANE MISHAP FATAL Triéste, Italy, Sept. 27—(7)}—Two pergons were killed and four injured Monday when a mail-passenger plane operating on the Venice-Trieste line overturned in a forced landing on the water at Goado Island. / 0 A *GENUINE SUPER-POWERED TWO-CYLINDER Tuesday forenoon reached figures well beyond those for any other fall term in the history of the school, Dr. George A. McFarland, president, an- nounced. NOW SCIENCE TELLS WHY BRAN IS SO GO00 FOR HEALTH Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN Has “Bulk” and Vitamin B; Also Healthful Iron “itd berd Kelloge’s ALt-BRaNn, millions people have overcome common constipation, and the head- aches, loss of appetite and energy that so frequently result. New laboratory tests show ALL ! Bran supplies two things needed to overcome temporary and recurring constipation: “Bulk” to exercise the H pally Vitamin B to help tone. (ara i intestinal tract. The ” in ‘BRAN is much i iiss thae-ot Nelseee. itis the bed | it forms a soft mass. Gently \ clears the intestines of wastes. Further experiments prove ALt- | Bran provides twice as much blood- building iron as an equal amount by weight of beef liver. i at sie aalciene ¢ cereal and area i Pat action, and often lead to harm: , ful habits. |_ Try two tablespoonfuls of | Sat Es overeatne ost oY overcome tinal i Y4 GREATER FOOD SPACE in the same sized cabinet “3112 DELIVERED, INSTALLED AND FEDERAL TAX PAID plas * VARRING TAI te the genuine, Super-Powet two- cylinder Frigidsire—e of General Motors. It gives the same fast freezing, lower oper- ating cost, aod plus % greater food space. You are cautioned against ac- Gepting a cheap, underpow- ered or poorly constructed 585 AND UP, AY THE FACTORY NORTH DAKOTA'S DEMAND PUTS ROCKNE 8th IN SALES HIS state has given the Rockne the hand of welcome as few cars Te received it. Latest registration figures show this car that was unknown here in January won 8th place in July. Get a Rockne and you get the car that brought quality into the ~ low priced field—the low priced car that gives you style, size and speed that are sensational—that comes to you complete with Free Wheeling, Full Synchronized Shift, Silent Second, Automatic Switch-Key Starting, 4-Point Cushioned Power, Double Drop X Frame and numerous other costly car advancements. Arrange for an appraisal and a trial drive today! Every closed body wired for radio Sandin-Wilde Motors, Inc. Dealers 304 Fourth Street Bismarck, N. Dak. Phone 1500 When Household Help Is Needed Permanent or temporary help, a girl to.take care of the children at night, a maid, a cook ... you'll find just the kind of help you want at the time you want it with an ad in The Bismarck Tribune Classified Section, The ad-taker will help you formulate the ad that will bring the help you want. ‘PHONE 32 continue hauling garbage Wed- nesday, September 28, 1932, BOARD OF CITY COMMISSIONERS. Nuys, Indianapolis attorney and for- | mer U. 8. district attorney, is con-| ceded a good chance of spilling Wat- son out of the senate seat he has held 16 years. stipation. If your inte: is not relieved this way, see your Au-Bran has a dalicious, nut Dahners-Tavis Music Co. Bismarck -- Mandso Frigidaire Dealers Everywhere THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WANT-ADS ete. Recipes oo, ie red-and-; in Battle Creek. The Tribune Want Ads Bring Resulte ~