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DIES IN CALIFORNIA Former Dakotan Was Youngest Member of State Consti- tutional Convention Charles Carothers, 73, one of the few surviving members of the convention that framed the constitution of North Dakota in 1889, died early Wednesday morning in his Santa Ana, Cal., home it was learned here Wednesday by his brother-in-law, Judge A. G. Burr of the North Dakota supreme court. Mr. Carothers died of a heart at- tack, it was said. He had made his home at. Sante Ana, where he was engaged in the banking business, for the past 25 years. Born in August, 1863 in western Pen- raylvania of a family that had made its home in that section for many years, Carothers came to North Da- kota when he was about 20 years of age and engaged in farming and bank- ing at Emerado, Grand Forks county. ‘He was married in Grand Forks in 1808 to Miss Elisabeth Raymond of Bmerado, As a member of the constitutional convention, to which he was the ‘youngest delegate, Carothers served on the committee of elective franchise and on the committee of education. ‘He was responsible for and introduced ‘an anti-lottery resolution in the con- vention, While living in North Dakota, Mr. Carothers helped to organize the Northwestern Fire and Marine Insur- ance company, which afterwards transferred its headquarters from Grand Forks to Minneapolis, and for @ time served as treasurer of that in stitution. About 28 years ago he removed to MENTHOLATUM Ges COMFORT Daily Phone 2285 Tin Work and Furnace In- stallation and Repair. Prompt Service Efficient Workmanship Reasonable Prices Richard Gerlach 511% Second Street Seven-year-old Sammy Murray of Oklahoma City, is shown Iilustrat- Ing how clothespins were placed on lips of second grade pupi!s by their teacher, Elizabeth Miller, to keep them from talking. “It was a game,” she said. (Associated Press Photo) Oregon, where he was distributing agent for a large automobile concern, serving an area covering three states. Later he moved to Santa Ana. Mr. Carothers was a brother of Judge R. M. Carothers, county judge of Grand Forks county, who died in Grand Forks in 1908. He leaves his widow; a son, Charles; two daughters, Dorothy and Margaret: and two sisters, Mrs. Charles Allen, Grand Forks, and Miss Willa Caroth- = of the New Orleans public library. Cleopatra was the last queen of Egypt. Gas Presses Heart Te your stomach ts upset, if you can't teen ges Blouting secms ‘ie try just one a a rida you of fa gleaue foul poleons out of NOTH and lower where ordinary reach, At All Leading Druggists.—Adver- tisement. ————— bowels, Adlerika acts laxatives do not even Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed The eye is an organ you can’t afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Offices o) ite the G, P. Hofel since 1914. Phone 533 Bismarck, N. D. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1986 PRESIDENT GREETS NATIONAL GRANGE Sends Message as Member Holding Highest Honor, 10,- 000 Receive Degree Columbus, O,, Nov. ,12.—(#)—Pres!- dent Roosevelt messaged the National Grange convention Thursday that a “fight to achieve real equality for ag- riculture”-would be: pressed forward. The president's message was & greeting for the 70th birthday of this bers in 35 states. It was sent to Louls J. Taber, National Grange master, to be read at a birthady party this af- ternoon, “Through you as master of the Na- tional Grange, I wish. to send my freetings to the membership,” the | president's message said. Mr, Roosevelt, a Grange member for 25 years, holds the organization's highest honor—the seventh degree— which 10,000 members received here Thursday. holding the impressive patron of hus- bandry ceremony four times during the day in a theatre here as part of the organization’s 70th annual con- vention. The Grange decked itself out for {ts 70th birthday party late Thursday, with Harper Sibley of Rochester, N. Y., president of the U .§, Chamber of Commerce, and Carl B. Fritsche of Detroit, a member of the .National | Chemurgic council, listed as speakers. Liquor Control Group Meets Next Thursday Representatives of city, village and county governing bodies from through- out the state will meet in Bismarck at 1:30 p. m, next Thursday to discuss ordinances and regulations for co! trol of the sale of liquor under the new liquor law in North Dakota, ac- cording to Myron Atkinson, Bismarck city auditor and secretary of the North Dakota League of Municipali- ties. Olson, Fargo mayor and president of the North Dakota League of Munici- palities, and Fred Krause, Hazen, chairman of the Mercer county board of commissioners and president of the North Dakota Ccunty Commission- ers’association. It will be held in the | Bismiarck*municipal auditorium. Members of a committee appointed by Olson and Krause to work out sug- gested regulations and ordinances for the control of liquor general neeune here. New Way to Hold Loose FALSE TEETH Firmly in Place} Do false teeth annoy and bother by iyi upping when you ea prinkle @ litt . This new North Dakota _ The whole is ES Power & Light Co. Dinner was : Meltingly tender, With flavor Sealed in By waterless ELECTRIC COOKING, With healthful Food values Retained. The Boss Smacked dis lips, And said “How in the World do you Do it—1 Have never Tasted anything So delicious.” flubby cot A raise— Thanks to His wife's ELECTRIC RANGE: And me! farm’ organization which has mem-| _ Grange officers split the huge class, | The meeting was called by Fred O.} will meet at) || Fargo Saturday, and will submit a/ report of their proceedings to the| i] the membership of the Menoken 4-H. a club, of which Chester Robertson was named president. Eagle Pass, Texas, Nov. 12,—(7), —Rattling down the road in a wheezing eight-year-old automo- bile came the vice president of the United States. F A canoe was on top. Canvas buckets hung on the sides, Fish- ing poles waved in the inconsid- erable breeze. ‘The car gasped and stopped. + Out stepped John Nance Gar- ner, beetle-browned, white hatred. “‘Lo, Hermann,” he shouted. Thus “Cactus Jack” began the Bring Million Dollar Suit Against Dafoe Chicago, Nov. -12-—)—Chlet Dep- uty U, S. Marshal J. E. Tobin said Thursday Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe, med- ical advisor for the Dionne quintup- lets, was legally served here Wednes- day with a summons in a $1,000,000 | breach of contract suit. The question of whether the Can- adian physician was served properly ose after his arrival by plane late Wednesday at Newark, N. J. He told reporters he had not been served when Fred Davis, a newspaper feature service photographer, grabbed the summons before it reached the doc- tor’s hands. Tobin, after a brief conference with Deputy Marshal Joseph Konrath, an- nounced that Konrath’s surprise visit to the municipal airport just as Dr. Dafoe was about to depart was not in vain, “Konrath, who recognized Dr, Da- foe from photographs, asked him who he was, and when he admitted his entity he read the summons to him,” said Tobin, The summons requires the doctor's pearance in Chicago during the De- mber term of the federal district court. The pending litigation involves a dispute over the right to exhibit the five Dionne daughters. 4-H Clubs Formed at Menoken and Driscoll Three new 4-H clubs have been or- ganized in Burleigh county during the st_ week, it was announced Thurs- y by Robert Heine, assistant county Two clubs were established at Dris- | coll and one at Menoken. At Driscoll, clubs were organized with Mrs, Alma Mount the leader of the Girls’ Home Recreation group and Ed Thomas the leader of the boys’ club. Irene Koessal was named assistant leader of the girls’ club, and Ruth Nelson and Phyllis Pederson | Were elected president and secretary. |The club has a total membership | of 20. | George Catlon was elected presi- jdent of the Driscoll boys’ club, and ;mamed vice president and sec! retary were Vernon Chapin and Wayne Ole son, respectively. Eighteen members | are enrolled. ~ | Six boy# and seven girls make up Paul Holmes is vice president of the club, Virginia Estell, secretary, and Gail Holmes, treasurer. PIONEER DAKOTAN DIES Fargo, N. D., Nov. 12.—(P)—Mrs. Jennie Knudson, pioneer resident, of Minnesota and North Dakota, died Wednesday in the home of a son, W. F, Knudson. She was married in Lise bon in 1898, had lived in Fort Ran- som, N. D,,’and moved here at the turn of the century. Four sons sur- vive. MILL STRIKE AT END Minneapolis, Nov. 12.—()—A second strike at the Pillsbury flour milis here had ended Thursday and work- ers again were on the job following settlement of labor disagreements be- tween the company and union work- ers. The mills were closed ten days ago following a strike called by union pany’s action in laying off 71 men. Mount Rainier has 48 square miles of glacier ice on its slopes the year sole: AT LAST A COUGH RELIEF —THAT ALSO SPEEQS RECOVERY Remember the name! It's #OLEY'S HONEY & TAR! Double-acting. Ono set of ingredienta hes, relieves tickling.hacking,coughe workers in protest against the com-|* faking ‘rlp which celebrated bis *cMermann”—Sheritt-elect Her- mann Lehmann of Maverick county—told about it Thursday. With the vice president in the car was Ben Franklin, Uvalde Loheparad famous angler of oo) “John had on an outfit he told me cost him $1.39 a year ago,” Lehmann recalled. “He said it had probably depreciated some since then.” Leased Indian Lands Subject to Tax Case} Washington, Nov. 12.—(#)—The su- preme court had received for decision Thursday a protest by the British- American Oil Producing company against paying taxes to Montana on oil produced from a lease of Black- feet Indian lands. The company asked the court in oral arguments to reverse a decision last February of the:Montana supreme court which denied an injunction re- Seeniny, the state from collecting the xes, H. ©. Hall of Great Falls, Mont., counsel for the company, contended treaties and agreements between the Indians and the federal government and between the federal government and Montana precluded Payment of the taxes. Attacking the company’s case, Oscar A. Provost, counsel. for the Montana state tax commission, -argiled the Montana siipreme court was justified in refusing the injunction because Congressional acts of 1924 and 1927 granted the state permission to col- lect such taxes “as long as the taxes did not become a lien on the land or a charge against the property of the Indian owner.” Indian Is Given Life |i Sentence for Killing Conrad, Mont.» Nov. 12.-— (®) — Aloysius Evans, 28, Indian, was:-taken by Sheriff C. M. Embody to the Mon- tana penitentiary at Deer Lodge Thursday to begin serving a life sen- tence for killing his wife. Evans Pieaded guilty to slaying his wife with an axe several weeks ago. He was sentenced by District Judge R. M, Hattersley. At the first SNIFFLE.. Quick!—the unique aid for preventing colds, Especially de- signed for nose and upper throat, where most colds start. Garner Says $1.39 Fishing |NEW PACT T0 BIND Equipment Has Depreciated SOUTH EUROPEANS Italo-Austro-Hungarian Agree- ment Seen on Bolshevism, League of Nations Vienna, Nov. 12.—(7)—Italy, Austria and Hungary—already bound together by economic and financial pacte—are building a tri-partite front Bal eaeer| Bolshevism, Spanish the League of Nations, informed sources disclosed Thursday. A foreign office spokesman said an Italo- Austro-Hungarian agreement, coupled with a possible bid to Ger- many to join the bloc, was on the agenda for ensuing sessions of the current conference among the three nations, The Spanish situation, the spokes- man declared, would come up. It was rumored in diplomatic quarters that recognition of the insurgent govern- ment in Spain was possible should the Socialist administration fall. Responsible sources also asserted & concensus would be sought against Communism. Diplomatic and other circies were astir with talk over the recognition of Italy's conquest of Ethiopia ex- pressed {n toasts to King Victor Em- manuel of Italy Wednesday night by Jurt Schuschnigg, Austrian chancel- lor, and Foreign Minister Koloman Me Kanya of Hungary. HELP 15 MILES OF KIDNEY TUBES Te Ld) out Acids and Other Phen cinta itiiat ontan 18 Miles tiny tubee or i which bi i help t0 0 puny the bbe a eo you es aly. Moat people Pore conver enaly are ait 8 Smartiog ent OF eed tt wa Barge toa ie i our kidneys or Diadder, wrRalemoces facia oF p ions in your blood, when due to functit idisorters, ay be the beginni Meackacty ey ratio pains, lumbag ia, toa of energy, getting up pi hts, swelling, No even, Headaches oe ALFALFA HAY available on drouth rates. Write or wire Globe Seed & Feed Co. Twin Falls, Idaho Security Board to Have Offices Here Although state offices for the 80- cial security board, new arm of the federal government directing old-age benefit. work for which collection of premiums will begin in January, will be established in Fargo, there also will be a local office in Bismarck. Postmaster Chris Bertsch, who is charged with providing office space for federal agencies where possible, said Thursday he had been informed that district offices would be estab- {shed here-and at Grand Forks, Mi- not and Dickinson. The work of distributing blanks upon which workers are to apply for the old-age insurance will be done by the postoffice department later this month, Bertsch said. GENUINE QUICK-ACTING BAYER ASPIRIN Va taster! Bayer Tablets Dissolve Almost Instantly For Amazingly Quick Relief Get Genuine Bayer Aspirin You can now get Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN for virtually 1¢ a tablet at any drug store. Two full dozen now, in a flat | pocket tin, for 25¢! Try this new package. Enjoy the real Bayer | article now without thought of price! Do this especially if you want ! quick relief from a bad headache, Neuritis or neuralgia pains. Note illustration above, and remember, BAYER ASPIRIN works fast. And ask for it by its full name — | BAYER ASPIRIN — not by the name“aspirin” alone when you buy. Get it next time you want quick Color blindness is more prevalent among men then among women. All Who Suffer From Aeute Attacks Asthma-Bronchitis Persistent Coughs Bi) Ya true tet iy eneare : areata i nights ne sleeps suffer al re esi ign yea si jeep sound wake. re wil be Tat ” Rate sven nie, SR ear ye fe tee cz give. frrvedicte' rellat trom From that’ e s . le arti ts att fanaa oF ae ie | REMEMBER: LAST WINTER! INSTALL NATURAL GAS HEATING © ONLY 3 MORE WERKA OF SPECIAL PRICES AND ALLOWANCES For installing natural gas burners and furnaces Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. Phone 1030 RADIATOR The Standard Deoler will flush your radiator, check for leaks ond put in Radi- ator Solder if necessary. He carries the best anti- freeze solutions and will check your radiator for SPAR es nchial tubes: qn phlegm, helps break ne 8 cough due to's cold and speeds recovery. For quick relief and speeded-up recover’ lank go ugg for double acting FOLEY 8 HONEY. S135 idealfor children, bottle todays CHARRED ruins tell a sad tale of de- struction, yet any wise property owner (one fully insured in a de- pendable company) will be able to start at once in rebuilding his destroyed home. Insure today in a well known, dependable stock fire insurance company —as the HARTFORD. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” Bismarck 218 Broadway _ Phone 577 sofety at regular intervals. them, Many Standard Dealers will text, clean and regop your spark plugs. They can supply new spark plugs when you need K PLUGS CRANKCASE For easy winter starting and safe running, the Standard Dealer will drain your summer crankcase oll and refill with the special winter grade of Ise-Vis"D". To make your winter gear- shifting easy ond prevent extra load on your engine, the Standard Dealer will clean out old lubricant from the transmission ond fill it with Winter Grade Stondord Transmission Oil. engine. The re Dealer will clean out all old lubricant and change Grade Standard DIFFERENTIAL Summer differential tubri- cantthickensin cold—puts an extra drag on your _ GASOLINE And, of course, the Standard Decler will fill your tank with Standard Red Crown, the new wine ter gasoline that gives ‘one-second starting, Standard Oe not trust using teo smooth Hre-treeds on skiddy winter streets. Most Stenderd Deslers can replace wom tires with Genuine Arst-line Attos tires at reacen- cole cout. They will else check your tires regularly for correct pressure,