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DEALERS WILL SEEK RATE GUTS ON COAL OVER WHOLE STATE Recent Reductions Have Not Aided Eastern Section, Association States Devils Lake, N. D., Sept. 30—()— Freight rates on lignite coal moving into the eastern section of North Dakota by rail have increased over last year rather than decreased ac- cording to a bulletin being issued Monday by James Barrett, secretary of the North Dakota Retail Coal Dealers association and North Da- kota Traffic association. Rate reductions which went into effect last Saturday extend only a limited distance from the mines to meet truck competition and will serve a territory populated by less than 50 per cent of the people of this state, Barrett said. Increase of 10 and 15 cents per ton have been allowed by the Inter- state Commerce commission and North Dakota board of railroad com- mission and are still in effect over the major portion of the state and particularly the entire eastern sec- tion of the state, the bulletin stated. North Dakota retail coal dealers will continue their efforts to sccure rate reductions on lignite coal over the entire state, pointing out that the present rates are discriminatory and should be granted all the people of the state. Rates have been reduced as high as 40 cents or more per ton at some points in the state, while increases of 10 and 15 cents a ton appiy over much of the state, Barrett said. Representatives of the Coal Deal- ers’ association have participated in all of the recent hearings before the railroad commission regarding continuously urged reductions on changes in freight rates and have freight rates applying to lignite coal. The policy of the organization in this Tespect is to be continued, Barrett said. Temvik Woman, Once Local Resident, Dies Mrs. Charles N. Hendrix, 62, wife of the Northern Pacific depot agent at Temvik, N. D., died at 9:40 p. m., Saturday at a local hospital. The cause of death was arterial sclerosis or hardening of the arteries. Mrs. Hendrix, whose maiden name was Una Vera Gifford, was born June 4, 1873, at Petroska, Mich. She lived here for several years prior to moving to Temvik with her husband in 1918. Funeral services will be held at 2 p. m, Tuesday at Hazelton. Burial will be made in the Temvik cemetery. Besides her husband she leaves three sons, C. E. Hendrix of Albert, Sask. Canada; G. G. Hendrix of Cayuga, N. D., and L. P. Hendrix of Hazelton, N. D. National C. of C. Man Talks to Local Board C. R. Miles of Minneapolis, regional manager of the United States Cham- ber of Commerce for Minnesota, Mon- tana, North and South Dakota, ad- dressed members of the Bismarck As- sociation of Commerce board of di- rectors at a luncheon meeting here Monday noon. Present also at the ng ee being laid t we cables between towers San Francisco Ba Displaying t longest single oe THE BISMARCK Cobweb for Catwalk TRIBUNE, RAISING FUND FOR * RAIL PENSION LAW L. E. Bordwell Outlines Plan Which Oct. 18 Function Here Will Benefit L, E. Bordwell, Mandan, member of the board of directors of the Rail- way Employees National Pension as- sociation, Monday explained the pur- pose of the Victory ball which the Bismarck and Mandan chapters of the national group will sponsor Fri- day, Oct. 18, at the Midway club. Cards and dancing will be the en- tertainment at the function which will be open to the general public. A campaign to sell tickets now is be- ing conducted among business and professional men and railroad em- ployees. Interest in what the pension pro- gram of the railworkers is has been awakened by announcement of the coming party, according to Mr. Bord- well, who explains briefly that it ts 1 it even an intrepid cat would tread this so-called orkmen who will fabricate huge 742 feet above the Golden Gate in the height of nonchalance, these workmen go unconcerned about their job of buijding the world's span bridge. Stratosphere Fliers | Scan Weather Report) | Rapid City, 8. D., Sept. 30—(7)— Weather reports from a wide area| were scanned Monday for word of! ideal conditions which will send Capt.| Albert W. Stevens and Capt. Orvill A. Anderson aloft in their third at- tempt to explore the stratosphere with a balloon of record breaking size. At the “strato-camp” southwest of Rapid City the National-Geographic Society-Army Air Corps aerial ex- Pedition was poised for a takeoff as soon as clear weather is predicted over the probable flight area east and south of the Black Hills. Thomas W. McKnew, National Geographic flight executive, said the equipment was ready. Doctor’s Wife Facing Court in Kidnap Case! Mexico, Mo., Sept. 30—(#)—Flanked ; by 12 of her 24 defense attorneys, Mrs. Nellie Tipton Muench, comely wife of a St. Louis physician, went on; trial Monday before Judge W. C./ Hughes on a charge of complicity in} |the kidnaping of Dr. Isaac D. Kelley | April 20, 1931. | The red-haired defendant is | charged with being the “finger wo-| man” for the criminal band that ab-; ducted Dr. Kelley and later released | him without collecting a $50,000 ran- | som demand. Accompanied by her husband, Dr. Ludwig S. Muench, she alighted from ;@ car and showered cameramen with lclouds of white powder when they attempted to photograph her. She continued to hurl the powder until Emperor In High Hat This new picture of Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia shows him wearing: an unusual broad- brimmed silk hat as he rode through | streets of Addis Ababa recently. (Associated Press Photo from Par- amount News) FHA Representative Plans Eastern Trip she had entered the courtroom. ee ee | SEES ‘NO ALTERNATIVE =| Brighton, England, Sept. 30.—(@)—| W. A. Robinson, president of Bri-| tain’s Labor Party conference, told Sydney C. Johnson, special repre- sentative with the headquarters staff of the Federal Housing Administra- tion, plans to leave here Thursday on ja trip which will take him to Sioux |Falls; Washington, D. C., New York, a plan to secute pensions for rail- workers through federal enactment. Mr. Bordwell states that the rail- roads and their employees are ex- empted from provisions of the Social Security act. The Railroad Retire- ment act of 1935 is designed to keep the aged railworker from depending on charity or public welfare agencies and is the culmination of five years of effort by the employees group. The act provides that the employees match a percentage of their payroll with the carriers and this be com- bined with federal funds in financing the pensions. To promote improvements in the features of the present law and to defend it in the courts, where it is understood the carriers will put it to a test, units are holding benefits to raise funds, the party to be given here being one of these. Cancer Is Fatal to Tuttle Resident, 67 Joseph Robert Davis, 67, of Tuttle, N. D., died Sunday evening at Tuttle from cancer. He had been ill for} , some time. Puneral services will be held at 11 a. m. Wednesday in the Nazarine jchurch at Tuttle with Rev. John Young officiating. Interment will be made in the Tuttle cemetery. Born Mar. 4, 1868, at Belfast, Ire- land, Mr. Davis came to the United States when a young man. He set- tled first in Illinois, moving later to Towa. He settled at Tuttle in 1920. Besides his wife, he leaves” four daughters, Mrs. Isabelle Colby of Mc- Kenzie, Mrs, John Becker of Sykes- ton, Mrs. G. Dackter of Regan and Bernice Davis of St. Paul, and three |soris, Lloyd Davis of Belmond, Ia., James E. Davis of Tuttle and Robert Davis of Grafton. WORKERS CALLED New Rockford, N. D., Sept. 30—(#) —William Webster, president of the Workers’ League of Grand Forks, has called a state convention of other similar organizations throughout the state here Sunday when the question of organizing a state body will be taken up. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 80, 1935 ab; wy are shown In an apartment in tle. (Associated Press Photo) Double Funeral Rite For Knute Frosaker Fargo, Sept. 30.—(?}—Double fun- eral services will be held Tuesday for Knute Prosaker, 54, prominent figure in automobile circles who died Satur- ‘day in a Fargo hospital. At 1 p.m. there will be services in Fargo and at at 3 p. m., in the Gol church at Kin- dred, where burial will take place. Dismembered Bodies Is Scottish Mystery Moffat, Scotland, Sept. 30—(>)— Dismembered parts of bodies, believed to be those of a man and a woman, furnished Scottish police with the most sensational mystery of recent years Monday. The human remains were found scattered in a rocky ravine 80 feet below a highway. They included two mutilated heads, two feet, a fore arm, a hand, and a few bones. Dennis J. McCarthy, Railway Agent, Dies Huron, 8. D., Sept. 30.—(#)—Dennis Northern railrway in Huron, died at @ hospital here Sunday of acute em- bolism resulting from a weakened heart and asthma. The body will be taken to Fargo, N. D., Monday for burial. Services will be held there Thursday. McCarthy served as agent for the Great Northern at Sioux City, Minot ~ PROM TRIP ABROAD Finds Life Placid and Prosper- ous on Island of Guern- sey, Ancestral Home Life moves placidly and contented- months’ vacation to the birthplace of his parents. . Because of an old treaty, the island- ers know little of the depression. Under terms of the treaty they pay no taxes to Great Britain and their principally grapes and dairy +. | products are admitted duty free, too, said. A hearty kiss was Joe Louis’ reward from his bride of a few hours, the former Marva Trotter of Chicago, 7 ¢ submission in four rounds of their heavyweight fter he had beaten Max Baer into cir heavy; fight In New York. Harlem's “Sugar Hill,” after the bat and Fargo before coming to Huron in 1933, Surviving besides the widow are two daughters, Mrs. Agnes Chisholm, Fargo, and Mrs. Mary Monaco, Miles City, Mont., and two brothers and two sisters in St. Paul, Minn McGrady Goes to Site Of Waterfront Row Washington, Sept. 30—(#)—Edward F. McGrady’s assistant secretary of labor, and the administration’s ace labor trouble shooter, left by plane Monday for the Pacific coast to try to stop the waterfront labor trouble there, 11,151 STUDENTS ENROLL Minneapolis, Minn., Sept. 30.—()}— Preliminary figures released by regis- tration officials at the University of Minnesota Monday showed enroll- ment was 11,151 students, an increase of 1,006, over last year’s attendance figures of 10,145. BANDITS KILL 14 JAPS Tokyo, Sept. 30.—(?)—The newspa- per Asahi reported Monday that a Japanese leutenant and 13 soldiers had been killed, and four wounded, J. McCarthy, 53, agent for the Great | When 300 bandits ambushed @ small Japanese column. “Schilling pepper Enjoy the luxury s 5 Mrs. Thelma Buxton (above), was’. ‘aken into custody and questioned at Chestertown, Md., in connection, with the VYhatchet staying” of Mra, - Effie Buxton, Wer 68.ycar-old moth. er-in-law. (Associated Press Photo) MRS, LEITZEN DIES " Fargo, Sept. 30.—()—Mrs. Philo- mene Schill Leitzen, 83, died of old’ . ‘age complications Monday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. J. B, Aske, Moorhead. HILL ASSOCIATE DIES Los Angeles, Sept. 30—()—John T. Twohy, 70, pioneer western rail- road builder,, will be buried here Tuesday. He was associated for years with James J. Hill. Mothers ! treating children’s colds, don’t take VISKS Pravin ove otnenst Ov chances..use People ask us that question every day: The answer is: chances are good, We have a lot of money available for good loans and we only wish the demand were greater so that we could put it to work. ” . If you want to know whether you can borrow, the way to find out is to come in and ask: Our officers will be more than glad to discuss your plans with you and, if possible, to agree on a satisfac- tory basis for accommodating you. We're always in the market for good loans: First National Bank | ames hah een “The Pioneer Bank delegates to the annual party mect-' Chicago and Cleveland. meeting was C. L. Young, national BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA councilor of the local association. GOITRE POISONS NERVES AND BODY “Sufferers of Goitre often do not realize the danger of their affliction” states the head physician of a well known Battle Creek Goitre institu- tion, whose home treatment has brought enthusiastic reports from thousands of former Goitre victims. This physician, in his warning against neglect of this dangerous condition, calls attention to the thousands of human wrecks caused by Goitre. Anyone suffering, who will write to the Physicians Treatment and Advisory Co. Suite 872-J, 65 Michigan Ave., Battle Creek, Mich- igan, will receive absolutely free, a large illustrated book on how to end Goltre at home. Send your name today.—Advertisement. _An Appreciation Before leaving the good city of Bismarck, I per- sonally desire to express my appreciation and thanks to the many friends and patronage we have enjoyed, and trust that my suc- cessor may have your continued support. ing Monday that the League of Na-| tions has “no alternative” but to/ threaten to» use force of arms if Premier Mussolini refused to bow toy moral and economic sanctions in the Italo-Ethiopian conflict. | PATROL CHECKS LIGHTS New Rockford, N. D., Sept. 30.—(P) —Several members of the North Da-| kota highway patrol have been oper- ating between here and Sheyenne in- specting automobile lights and check- | ing up on the number of drivers’ li- censes in this vicinity. PLAN FALL FESTIVAL New Rockford, N. D., Sept. 30.—(#) —Committees appointed by the mem- ; bers of the local Junior Chamber of Commerce have been busy arranging a fall festival and grain and vegetable show here Oct. 10. | Noah Webster took 21 years to pre- pare his American Dictionary of the English Language—from 1807 to 1828. customers whose generous Johnson, who with Frank Glotz- bach, associate state director, re- United States turned recently from a trip through central and eastern North Dakota, expressed gratification at the way people in the state have accepted the housing program, During the trip, the pair conduct- ed mutual mortgage clinics at Har- vey, where 47 persons were in at-' tendance, Finley, and Hillsboro. Fri- day and Saturday of last week they had charge of a better housing booth at the Corn and Lamb show at Val- ley City. Alaska Is Giving Up « Hunt for L Lost Plane Government Has just purchased Water Car Heaters _over 50 Zesto Hot from us. This is the second season we have furnished this de- partment with this fine accessory. We will install this same heater in Fairbanks, Alaska, Sept. 30.—(?}— Organized search for the airplane which vanquished Aug. 19 faced an end Monday with the expected return from the Arctic Circle of William Lavery and Herman Lerdahl, pilots, who have spent weeks in the hunt. In the missing plane were Pilot Arthur F, Hines and three passen- gers, Mr. and Mrs. John Lonz and Alton Nordale, all of Fairbanks, who had: been en route here from Daw- son, Y. T. Masonic Chief Reviews Parade DOUGLAS YEATER Commercial Manager North Dakota Power & Light Co. We'll All Go Over to the Patterson IT’S A TREAT ! {!!TO DINE AT Reviewing @ full dress regalia parade of Knights Templars, previous to the opening of cer- emontfal activities of the Thirty- third Degree Gcottish Rite, in Cleveland, O., Sovereign Grand Comfnan: lelvin M. Johngon of Boston ts shown here. ‘Visit- Ing celebrities included sover- eign grand commanders from England, treland, your car for only $9.95 complete. Let us also show you the Chrysler double rotary fan all silent heater. DEALERS — Write us for wholesale prices on our full heater line. CORWIN-C HURCHILL MOTORS, Inc. Bismarck, N. D. 800 Auction Sale of Horses 800 At Aberdeen, South Dakota Tuesday and Wednesday October 1st and 2nd : Starting at 10:00 A. M, on the above date we will sell 800 head of C.B.C mares and geldings ranging age from two-year-olds. and up. fies choice in lot | of our -own raising, sired by pure. Farmers, dealers and our land leases in fail to feeders should not fail this sale as we are selling the kind that will grow into money. CHAPPEL BROS., INC., Owners. E. L, JORDAN, Auctioneer. of fine pepper. Affiliated with FIRST BANK STOCK CORPORATION Try The Tribune First for Your OFFICE EQUIPMENT » A complete line of NEEDS Ver- tical. Filing Equipment embracing all standard devices is available for your selection. > May. it Two-Drawer File as a Desk Companion, Three-Drawer Cqunter Heights for an efficient Counter,in your office, combining on the same floor space a Counter and-Filing Equipment, ‘or Four-Drawer Height files for standard filing requirements. : We haye them all. Let us help you, Five grades are available, a qin ity to. <7 fit every- ‘purse. You equipment’ an-ex- 'e save you money. consider your f: ve problem. ‘* need: nok Call our Office Equipment Department Bismarck Tribune Co. Bismarck, N. D. Look for the “STEEL AGE” trademark, .