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SET HEARING DATE FOR RAIL COMPLAINT State Board to Take Testimony on Rates For fron and Steel Products Hearing on complaint of the James- town Traffic association against rail- road rates involving less-than-car- load shipments of iron and steel ar- ticles in North Dakota will be held at Jamestown August 7, the North Da- kota railroad commission announced ‘Thursday. The railroad commission and the state mill and elevator are prepared to present additional evidence in the re-opened grain rate case now under- way at Chicago. The two groups ex- pect to testify late this month. Com- mission Ben C. Larkin is sitting in a cooperative capacity with the Inter- state Commerce commission examin- ers. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1933 Minnesota Tornado Poses for Its Picture + > AléXatider G. Standtiagé, legally declared dead, has returned after an absence of 12 years to find his wife remarried and his daughter adopted by her stepfather. But the wife said she planned to re- marry Standridge when her di- voree decree became final. The situation was disclosed in a suit on file in Superior court here Thursday by Standridge and his former wife, Wilhelmina, against her second husband, Wil- frid Page, a cook. The action asked that the adop- tion of Standridge’s daughter, be nullified because Standridge is alive and “willing and anxious to assume his rightful obligations.” Mrs. Page said she felt her former husband's 12-year disap- pearance was caused by a head injury he suffered during the World war. Standridge said the 12 years were spent working in Canada, Alaska and various parts of the United States. Last June Mrs. Page obtained rere ras ry Returns From Dead | To Reclaim Spouse || The federal government's determination to stamp out kidnaping is illustrated by this picture, which shows, at extreme right, Joseph B. Keenan, assistant U. S. attorney general, assisting John V. Hill, second from right, assistant prosecutor at the trial of kidnapers of Mary McElroy, daughter of the city manager of Kansas City. The commission also announced fil- ing of rates by the Minot Gas com- pany on manufactured gas used for an interlocutory decree of divorce from Page. water heating, one rate applying to those who will use the service throughout the year and the other for those using it five months only. These are entirely new rates and are not @ modification of any existing rate. Other actions of the Cle ee included approval of reduced rur: telephone rates filed by the Dakote Central Telephone" company for | Accuses Johnson of | ‘Flinching’ on Code || Washington, Aug. 3.—()—Oscar | Sutro, general counsel and vice pres- lident of the Standard Otl company ‘of California, Thursday told the re- covery administration that a trade (Copyright, 1983, by W. T. Oxley) Here is a remarkable and unusual photo of a tornado in action, showing the black funnel of a twister that cut a swath through the towns of Friberg and Aurdal, Minn., recently, spreading ter- his lawyer and a stenographer. napers, Walter McGee, the kidnaper, is second from the left, between Keenan recently was placed in charge of the federa! drive on kid- McGee confessed his guilt. serving a two-and-a-half year sen- tence there, The justice department announced ‘Thursday that the bureau of prisons had investigated and found the charges true. REPORT 1,000 DROWNED ! Peiping, China, Aug. 3.—(#)—Floods | caused by a collapse of dikes along! the Thichiang River near Shanyuan a great loss of livestock, dispatches from Sian reported Thursday. Wind velocity within a tornado has ever been measured, but is thought © be about 500 miles an hour. caused the deaths of 1,000 persons and '¢, Streeter; issuance of livestock buy- | er’s licenses to oe Se antec! ig. Sorenson and Person, 5 and J. F. McDonald, Stirum; renewal of pilot’s licenses issued to Harry W. Potter, Bismarck, Edwin M. Canfield, Williston, and Fred M. Roberts Jr., Bismarck, transport; and A. Ernest Mossman, Moorhead, Minn., private. Arizona Dry Forces Battle Repeal Vote enix, Ariz., Aug. 3—(?)—Arizona’s p cnr forces Thursday prepared to carry their fight against a vote ban repeal of the melee nue te’s supreme ,. beer the plea of Charles R. Osburn, Arizona temperance federa- tion campaign manager, for an in- junction to prevent Arizona's repeal vote next Tuesday, Superior Judge G. A. Rogers yesterday intimated the case would have to be carried to the United States supreme court. ror and causing considerable property damage. The picture was taken at Fergus Falls, Minn., nine miles away. — THIS CURIOUS WORLD — Te BELIEF THAT A CAT HAS MNE LIVES GOES BACK To THE DAYS OF ANCIENT EGYPT/ THE CAT-HEADED Goooess, A4SA/T> WAS BELIEVED BY THE EGYPTIANS TO HAVE NINE LIVES, AND A WITCH WAS. THOUGHT TO BE ABLE TO TAKE THE FORM OF A CAT NINE TIMES, | | It said Druggan had been a per-| sistent seeeker for extraordinary priv-| ileges and that «Chaplain James A.} Ording, Lester M. Wahler, guard, and Vernon R. Swearingen “have been summarily syspended” after admitting their part in the affair. Bandit Admits Guilt; Sentenced to Prison Bowbells, N. D., Aug. 3—(®}—Two | years to the day after the crime was committed, Bert Lighthall, 27, form- er Minoter, Thursday afternoon was sentenced at Bowhbells to serve 20 years in the state penitentiary for \robbery of the First National Bank of Bowbells. He pleaded guilty before Judge John C. Lowe of Minot. ‘The defense counsel said he under- stood that Lighthall, by pleading guilty, shortened his sentence by 10 years from what he would probably have received if he had stood trial before a jury and been convicted. Lighthall was recently apprehend- ed in Idaho. In the Bowbells holdup, Lighthall and another bandit, not yet appre- hended, obtained $6,572.60 in silver, currency and gold, and $50,000 in non negotiable securities. |code for the oil industry presented ‘by Hugh S. Johnson, the industrial administrator, “is no answer to the industry's problems.” Appearing as the spokesman for jall the forces demanding price regu- 14-Year-Old Linton Farm Boy Succumbs isticn’ sean wate scene ees | taken a determined stand, Sutro as- Valentine Horner, 14-year-old son/|serted: of Mr. and Mrs. Simon Horner, farm- “This code increases the burdens ers living near Linton, died in a local/of the industry and does nothing, as hospital about 4:10 o'clock Wednesday we see it, to carry out the liberal ; afternoon. views of a liberal administration. His death was caused by blood-poi-' “I think you have flinched on the |soning following an attack of abscess- ,cconomic question which the admin- es on his legs. He also had suffered |istrator should face and solve—price | 4n_attack of acute arthritis. fixing.” The boy was brought to the hospi-| Sutro brought again into the fore- tal here a day before his death. ground of efforts to formulate a code Valentine was born on a farm near for the industry the bitter question Linton Nov. 10, 1918, and had lived of price regulation against which sev- with his parents near Linton sincc, eral companies, including the Stan- having attended country schools. dards of New Jersey and Indiana, Funeral services will be conducted {the Texas company, the Royal Dutch jfrom the Rosendale Catholic church,!Shell and other interests, are fight- about 10 miles from Linton, at 10) ing, jo’clock Friday morning. with Rev. pies ciapeabeion Father Oe enlall etl ae Ral elegates mains wi interred in the churc! SOs enaeOANI ORIEL having fail- cemetery near there. At Pri St d ed to obtain sufficient signatures to 3 . | rison oppe: ntered. BARS WEDDING BELLS ‘ Daye et oeee London, Aug. 3—(P)—Lord Tren-| Washington. Aug. 3.—(@)—Three Resume Search for chard, oommissioner of Metropolitan Members of the staff of the Leaven- d Mi t police, issued an order today forbid-| Worth penitentiary have been sus- Accused Minnesotan ding constables to marry in the first |Pended for granting privileges to Ter- }four years of their atric rence Druggan, Chicago beer baron, Detroit Lakes, Minn., Aug. 3—(P}— Search for Martin Hundeby, 45, bachelor recluse, wanted in connec- tion with the slaying of two young farmers, was resumed Thursday in the heavily-wooded areas of south- eastern Becker county as authorities returned from a futile trip to Grand Forks, N. D. Five suspects held at Grand Forks, N. D., were viewed by Sheriff H. L. Johnston and Deputy Sheriff Sig Kirkness, but none answered the, de- scription of Hundeby, who was blamed by a coroner's jury for the shooting to death of Waino J. Kangas and Waino A. Kangas of Paddock township, in Otter Tail county. The victims were slain as they rode in a rumfle seat of an automobile while returning home from a dance. Hundeby has been missing from his home since the killing. Warning! ‘PRICES ARE ADVANCING ON ALL APPLIANCES ! Now is the time to take advantage of present low prices on gas ranges, water heaters, Electrolux refrigerators and home heating with Nature’s finest fuel. "S198 By NEA SERVICE, WC, Favors to Druggan Montana-Dakota ‘Power Co. HAS NO BRAIN/ MT HAS NERVES, BUT NO NERVE-CENTER.. HENRY SCOTT, THE MITTENEO PIANIST, PLAYS PUBLIC RECITALS WHILE WEARING HEAVY WOOLEN MWITENS. as Farm Administrators to Oppose Profiteering on Food, Textiles Washington, Aug. 3.—()—Farm | | AN ENTIRELY | NEW SUPERF MILK STRIKE SPREADS Boonville, N. Y., Aug. 3—(?)}—New York state’s milk strike swept into western and southern New York ‘Thursday, bringing an additional 10,000 farmers into the milk “holi- day” group. MINERS WANT BLUE EAGLE Melcher, Ia., Aug. 3.—(?)—Three hundred miners walked out of the Indiana Consolidated Co. mine No. 2, owned by the Rock Island railroad, because the Blue Eagle insignia of the National Recovery Administration was not on display. taxes paid on basic farm products by those who make the products into the things sold to the con- sumer. These taxes are already in ef- fect on wheat and cotton with others scheduled for later impo- sition. For the reports, retail prices on bread, milk, meat and other food necessities will be gathered from 50 cities and from more than 1,000 stores, including independents, chains, and specialty food shops. “We will anayze the farmers’ share in the food for which we are assembling retail prices and we are going to see that the farm- er gets his fair share of the re- tail price advance,” Dr. Howe said. administrators will combat any “profiteering” that may develop out of the recovery program by issuing weekly reports of prices paid by consumers and prices paid to'farmers for the same commodi- | ties. Dr. Fred C. Howe, consumers | counsel in the farm administra- | tion, Thursday announced estab- | lishment of the new service cov- | ering food and textile prices with | the first report scheduled soon. The reports, he said, will be aimed to provide the public with | price information to counteract | tendencies towards profiteering and towards the pyramiding of | WIND DELAYS ITALIANS | uled to take off as soon as weather Shoal Harbor, N. F., Aug. 3.—(#)—|is favorable for Valentia, Ireland. Wind and rains continued to hold General Italo Balbo’s squadron of 24; All motion pictures exhibited in Italian seaplanes here Thursday. They | Japan must pass the censorship of arrived eight days ago, and are sched- | the Japanese home office. LE The Chinese cultivate an odorless onion. $300 Gets Them | ipa Schilling TEA _ The wonder of CELLOPHANE is that it costs so Jittle and protects so com- pletely a thing so delicate as the flavor of fine tea. There have been “One-Feature” and “Two-Feature’” Gasolines before... NOW HERE’S A SEVEN- FEATURE GASOLINE... It’s no easy thing to produce a motor fuel like the new Standard Red Crown ...a motor fuel without any “blank spots”. . and still price it no higher than “regular” gasoline. The problem is not how to produce a higher anti-knock gaso- line .. . or a quicker starting gasoline .. . or a longer mileage gasoline... or a gum-free, sulphur-free gasoline. It’s a problem of combining all these desirable qualities . . . of pushing each forward without sacrificing any of the others. And that’s exactly what Standard Oil refining engineers have done. nlete Superfuel The Com Some “regular” gasolines may equal Standard Red Crown in one or two qualities—none surpasses it. And we believe that not one equals it in all the essentials of good gasoline seasonal variation. gy, 1 4 > 5 oan 5 Always cate everywhere. 91% ” Fresher because of Standard {Petesepptiestocin prop. & popularity. Try five gallons or more of this sparkling new wine- 3 colored motor fuel. See if you don’t notice a difference! STANDARD RED CROWN ALSO DISTRIBUTORS OF ATLAS TIRES He has a motherless baby and destitute parents to care for. Sc 25-year-old Gerald Haines of Philadelphia wertising thar he'll marry for $300 “any respect: able woman” who could be a good mother to his three-year-old child, with whom he is shown here. Top janti-knock rating for its price class. Accurately adjusted for ——_—_—— TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY The California Wave Nook, 102 Third Street, Bismarck, specializes in com- bination permanents at $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00 complete. Our patrons send their friends. Phone 782. YOUR HAIR, comes down dripping wet, from a, REAL STEAM SUPER- CURLINE PERMANENT. Every ‘wave an oil wave. Special to Sep- tember ist, $3.50 Harrington's. Phone 1 celetation and mileage. e Free from harmful sulphur and gum. seftan in starting, ac- e 7 Sells at the price of regular. Orange Pekoe (Black) Japan (Green) A NOWoat your GROCERS Cope 932 Sastsrg 1m