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ROOSEVELT BEGINS Motor, Air Traffic SIS PROBE OF NATIONAL, PROBLAK _Held Up By Sleet | POLITICIAN DIES | Wire Communication Services Talks With Congressional Ad- in Eastern Part of State visers on Neutrality and Are Damaged Relief Issues TO BARN PAYCHECK IN WORK FOR GOP National Chairman's $25,000 Salary Accompanied by Numerous Headaches St.Louis, Dec. 26.—()—Tragedy was matched by the heroism of an attractive young swimmer as a low- flying biplane struck a tree and plunged into the Merameg river at suburban Sylvan Beach late Christ- mas day, killing McCoy Sanders, 28- ———— Hak old agi Treacherous ice-coated highways, The pilot, Al Constance, who suf- fered serious injuries, was pulled Washington, Dec. 26.—()—Presi- poor visibility and sleet-hampered By BYRON PRICE 7 wrecl dent Roosevelt and his congressional motor and air traffic across North | (Chief at. Barean: the Associated gives Bey our ay eer chiefs set about in serious fashion Dakota Saturday.as trouble shooters Press, Washington) year-old beauty operator, in a brave Saturday to plan for the opening of 3 for telephone and telegraph services| What next for John D. M. Ham-| rescue effort after jumping off the Congress 10 days hence, with many ‘ labored to restore normal service in|!iton, now that the Republican n&-| horse she was riding along the shore vital decisions facing them. 3 the eastern section of the state. tional committee has rejected his| of the river. The chief executive had to sandwich Planes were delayed between Chi-|Tesignation as chairman? Miss La Fevre was riding with her in between his conferences some con- cago and Billings, Mont,, by fog and| That Chicago “vote of confidence”! rather, J, J. La Fevre, when the pri- centrated work on his opening mess- : i heavy weather, Northwest Airways|—Nly two members voted in the| vateiy-owned plane swooped down @ ages, which may chart the course of negative—has been described as over- his second term in the White House. offices said here. Rain and sleet were whelming, but varied indeed must short distance from them, narrowly, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1936 EXPECT HAMILTON (Brave Beauty Saves missed the steel girders of a bridge and rammed into a large elm tr near the water's edge. Bundled ee in riding clothes, Miss La Fevre kicked off one boot on the run then plunged into the icy water. She reached Con- stance, untangled a wire which en- circled his head, arid swam ashore with him. ‘Without hesitation, the 120-pound brunette returned to the rapid! sinking ship to search fpr other oc- cupants. She said she spent seevr: minutes diving around the wreckage, but gave up under the impression there had been only one occupant. Miss La Fevre, who is an experi- the icy chill of the water until the second time she entered the river. reported from the Twin Cities to Val- AEN ngdrey en ane 20.” ae . ley City. A light snow was falling ae! hee cage ee? perlod of years convinced them that over western North Dakota and £08/ ‘The action is open to many inter-| anhydrous alcohol could be blended Developments already have outlined , blanketed eastern Montan: . 5 pretations, not the least of which is| Up to 20 per cent with gasoline and Hone both Noaded wih arpuene : Westbound buses were late artiv-lthat the ‘committee did not hold| Used successfully as a fuel for high ‘They are neutrality and relief. Back ing into Bismarck and drivers re-|Hamilton personally responsible for| compression combustion engines. It of them are scores of other problems : ported traffic “creeping” over High-|the election disaster. Hamilton him-| now is being sold from service sta- and proposals that made the usual way No. 10 from Cleveland to Fargo. | self admitted during the meeting that/ tions in four states, Nebraska, Kan- They said several minor accidents had |we made a lot of mistakes.” sas, South Dakota and Iowa, The i ts sound % pee Of (#: shore session, occurred on that stretch of oiled road.| But it would be strange indeed if] price is the same as for regular gaso- Highways west were reported to be|the committee was as nearly unani-| line. With war clouds over Europe dark- ening, neutrality legiiadonicess on Riom, France, Dec. 26—(P)— | generally “good” though visibility|mous as the vote itself would indi- the slips “ot cance cor! the Etlenne Clementel, 72, former | poor. cate. The elephant was sorely wound- Jecidlatora: (Present pbeersraants member of several French cabl- | ‘Trains were mostly running on/ed last autumn, and the recuperation W ARE INSP IN SPAIN back from his peace mission to South nets, died Saturday. schedule. Sleet-covered wires tam-|from such vital blows is slow. America, already has turned his mind Pered communications in telephone There persists in some quarters to the problem but has not announced and telegraph services. the feeling that Mr. Hamilton wislted what he would propose to replace the Temperatures were below the freez-|0ff on himself one of the most diffi- Jaw expiring May 1. W th R ing point for the past 24 hour period. |Cult tasks in recent political history, Evidence was accumulating that a eather eport Williston was coldest with 6 above |@nd that he is welcome to it. Even bitter fight was brewing over relief zero. It was 10 at Devils Lake and|hen his resignation was before the and the intertwined problem of bal- WEATHER FORBUAST. Minot. ‘The forecast for North Da-|cOmmittee there were no other known |New Defensive Strength ancing the budget. For Bismarck and vicinity: Mostly kote 1s snow Saturday night and no|-ODen 5 Sp eres copoeel i The issue will come to » head al-| cloudy tonight and Sunday; no de-|decided change in temperature. ecatiereds {emi m po ovenly a chee: Quickly Offset by New Of- cided change in temperat ‘ Hamilton contented themselves by most as s00n as congress meets, Cur- For N. ee P pees) In southern Minnesota, rainfall fe i We vent funds are running short and al tonne orth SORKOH Peer renay was so heavy that water’ flooded criticizing nin lensive Weapons new appropriation will be sought dur- ton; no decided cl in tempera-| highways and streets, stalling many ee Tteea F Mostly clouay | @utomoblles with fouled ignition the] ‘The obvious—and intended—inter-| (Pditor's Note—With Europe wait- ing January. snow extreme | Principal cause, pretation of the “vote of confidence” 1" anxiously to know whether President Roosevelt's budget mess-| rongneatg Rake, CORI UST Sets arcane CLT Ga Ee as is that it is 8 mandate to put the | ee creill increase or mendation for rellef spending for the| "ERY on oa ONTINUE party in “fighting trim” for the 1938) lsh civil war will incresce | or remainder of the fiscal year, but is pee cious, Senlenie ane C D lepnateasional) elecWons anne aahe strength of TiGderh armianients) not expected to contain estimates for} snow in east and south portions; si eee eae Vike that Buittoe Bukit Koes abe ( next year’s program. colder tonight or by Sunday, much colder in east th * ‘. sta) -| Talavera de la Reina, Spain, Dec. ccd on turing lis Eee iss eS coworrtons France Will Give Speberad in ny ansive ot ile pauls 26.—()—Foreign military Paid has face one other major problem—ex-] A high pressure area over Up Colonies for eee gan ua secre hid Jnl orenied Nii conene peng: ee tension of the president’s central Canadian Provinces, T' ‘The STAI ER GET trae 30.18 igchen, while, a. ioe pre: Peace Guarantee be settled first. During the campaign | Spain's civil war. powers. nounced it will ask for extension of| Valley te the Pacific const nine & deficit of more than $900,000 piled! steadily increasing equipment from the $2,000,000,000 stabilization fund|Sloux City 29.60 inches, Seattle 29.48| Madrid the situation seemed by no/UP, mainly for advertising and radio}abroad, new and formidable, has and of the chief executive's author- | inches. Warm weather prevails from| means menacing to western European|t!me. Hamilton was in charge then.| modernized the warfare since the tl 5 i ity to devalue the dollar. ghe erent Eat S, ater eons powers.” He now will be in charge of efforts to) first hectic days, before a hoped-for -————_—__—_—_—6| tures are reported over the northern| ‘The Frankfurter Zeltung also drop- | !quidate that debt. Thoughts of these | coup d'etat stretched out into a fairly | Additional Churches | |cicircsfim {ft' Gfcsv" tance "et| Bed a hint of the serlour situation by | oOccSs ‘ot commutes members| TE Sale War. ¢—___________— | gion ‘to the Pacific coast. mentioning the French “threat” to| the desires oF committee members! new defensive strength imported ageigmarck station barometer, inches: | abandon neutrality in Spain if “non- |e! anxious for a change iM| iom elsewhere in Europe appears GEORGE'S CH ” leadership. ner Third and Thayer Reduced to sea level, 29.91. | intervention of others” were not) “1 of admittedly was the attitude| frequently to nullify new offensive 2 Elsworth, Rector Sunrise 8:29 5 quickly and effectively assured. : gery ices Sunday: meee Caelemane Sunset 4:59 Ay ™ France was reported to have warn- Fed beaded . coalesce cunts peut tpetntsaid GLU PeerAlel o 9:30 a: m—Church school. a ed Germany that, if additional |ougnt by Hamilton during the cam-| bombing planes of latest design blast- 10:30—Morning prayer and sermon. masses of soldiers were sent to aid the 8 Het paign. (Hilles of New York arrived|ing Madrid with high’ explosives eR geo We tos ara tabaies ngelon: auch | Deted to consider it an out-and-out at, the meeting too late to vote, and] while soldiers battle hand-to-hand in The rector hopes that all those who | precipitation seal Uten greets pared: an out-and-out! Phipps of Colorado did not even at-| slimy sewers. have not made thelr communion will|kbove normal, elt ough colder probe attack on the Spanish government | tend.) Brand new anti-tank guns firing early service at 8 a. m, For the upper Miaslesipp! and lower| Russia was said to be encouraged by {gress may well trouble the national| cers while bottles of gasoline hurled Missouri valleys and the nort the firmer Anglo-French stand OMichairman. Two Republicans from by Moors set them afire anti- TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH |and. central Great. Plains unt Avenue A at Fourth Street loudy, behalf of nin-intervention. the house of representatives were| aircraft guns, Opie 8. Rindahl, Pastor Father’ recipitatio: pee The other most interested European /among the most outspoken of his rete Same ied Hat sete “There Is a Cordial’ Welcome at | peratu merally above normal, nes being sh ante I. per, Ttaly, seemingly content with |critics at the vote of confidence meet- ‘1 First Sunday attel’ Christmas, Dec- | CxcePt at times extreme northern'| its wihiopian victory and recentlyling, That brings up the question of and | planes! sul Delbe aioe Gown DY. b improved relations with Brit an rifle fire . original polish till Evciurent seteolifendienibionciseess al slese SIR RDECR POT HOME MAIECre rey tain andjhow well these men, and others, willl brightening the rifles of front-line : en SRENe France in the Mediterranean, re-/|follow any suggestions on legislative idiers while rear guard sentries ring worshlp 11:00 o'clock. PRECIPITATION mained apparently aloof from the|matters Hamilton might make. There) 017 Ova shotguns, s These contrasts only serve to, | Se a Y Hi Ke F Bi k Stati Aten want" tht cnae™” | aaah RieMacatyst a Re A eae mal be te solace for him wien he No eve! 5 8 On| J a “dee “Thursday, DAPI pe Wane, P< Ist to date 5B. Official sources preserved strict zee tensity, however, the amazing de eenlor Luther League, 9 Ist to date 16.24 silence on whether Reichsfuehrer Only 16 In Senate velopment of the war from the crude ay Accumulated defcy. to date ....10.32! qaoir Hitler is considering an offer| The death of Senator Norbeck cut/ military cradle in which it was born: PRESBYTERI Thayer at SIAN cm eg NORTH DAKOTA POINTS the pasty’s representation in the sen-| From pitchfork to machine gun... wove Baten Ses EERE: we Man Hep Nee ee eee anes [orn hand grenade... from srtilery See ee Aneta eeeity i aeney | Devlis: bake, ence iS 32 08| Otter might be too stiff for Der in thelr allegiance. ‘The others have fife ao poor caslouliot five lmisllsiexe : ploded to cannonading accurate within inches ... to far-flung man- euvers and military sti BY to ledge Hi Devils Lake, 5 i elationship Lim our novelty, IN OVery | wiilistone slags 6 ‘00 | Fuehrer to accept. been off the reservation frequently in air battles as extensive as those of the World war. Ri - | Fargo, é wick Rie nist ties|the past; doubtless medi puma, dante and Mater dames oma H doiin ihe path of onteaiora etteu mae iiagee Beet ive ediate departments, ; S i 0:00 a, m,—Adult Bible class. "1. ‘The African mandates under| What other than worry for Ham- var Rewari aia Gir], Me arume ar aisle wee which ire ar Gee emionat isturbances?, One house Bible school. High school ae Pet. Leetve ot Nations recess Get-\Tiberal bloc plans to push the old 8. Philathea class. | Men’s| Amarillo, Tex. acity 4 52.00 not a member of league. Forum Bible class. Boise, idaho, 3 2. A reported German deal with|Frazier-Lemke farm debt refinanc- ternealiceh” uals notetsor high [eninge i 2 ot Portugal foe s postion of Angola is] (05 Inv. Domreccntative Put of” New shes" aes, Woune Beasies” oe sugsreisaeitees 3 sat a involve German miller ap So ae ee, on the, DAT society, port of Portugal on | ‘ 5 Bxening, Fellowship service. Dodge City ts. tals BS ped chairman at the Chicago meeting. It v monton, 101 | anxious was stout criticism, too. aie inthe grove, atde Biovence| Haver tint, Slay sts id ; pecmne _ ut clasatied Hamilion as a *re- orning— colonial |actionary” under whom “party | secordi uanit Edi Prelude; Christmas Paviorale—eiel ieee : de ae proposti ¢|cannot be humanized or liberalized.” peed pe semonneaemrsera (IN i Ki Cit presel the Angola deal would have to be|Another Republican representative / Bismarck high school. Other awards (Dirkson of Illinois) arraigned the Commercial Awards Received by Students ‘Cynthia Dirseinataceived the club pin for the best paper in the recent 80 word shorthand transcription test, C dropped. for proficiency were also received by ing. chairman eneral who had failed. paighem: 0 Brightest ard Ren of Modena U h, clear .. x Sid li ht: Tt has been Mile more aan Atseae the -(poalesncents pony ae Gadd ee DELS| the Morning—Buck. Moorhead, Minn., u Some elignts on Hamilton t of Kansas Publishing company of ago for specimens of their work. E ee “Anthem: Christmas Carol—Roent-|Oniahime’ Cig, rsin’, Yule Celebrations | |bent on securing the Republican nom-| "Pay aa. in the 80 word transcrip- wen Phoenis, Ariz. cldy ination for his fellow Kansan, Gov- Prelude: Adaglo—Gounoi Pr, Albert, Sask. cldy -20 ernor Landon. That he did. Hamilton| tion test were received by Georgia nae Hi Ree ee ee Oy oe aa Yonkers, N. ¥., Dec. 26—VP—It |naturally was the spearhead of the|Mason, Pearl Hamery, Jean Semling, Negro Pom} i Evelyn Thorton, Florence Solberg, wie cordially invite you to join in at eas nsoarry Ce One 10 toe nish dolores: Cynthia Dursema, Beulah Hedahl, our services and in our fellowshi 50 ‘ 6 sof Evelyn Larson, Verna Schmidt, Grace Coarse grains rallied with wheat. rt) it lasted, police said. man Hamilton by name in the gov- a g SS 26 Yonkers officers found 14 |ernor's telegram to the national com-| Wilcox, and Elizabeth Tolchinsky. Three graduates of the school of| 8 44 radios missing when.they investt- | mittee, which seemed carefully worded.) The 60 word transcription award engineering at the University of} Sioux city, AH Landon spoke in general terms and| was earned by Louise Klein, Delma North Dakota are millionaires, Spokane, Wash. clear. 36 called upon the “party's elected rep-| Devitt, Marion Hyland, Caroline Swift Current, Ba k. clr 6 8 resentatives for intelligent leadership Kruger, Ruth Lips, Pearl Schwartz, eat 33 in formulating plans for the future.”| Evelyn Larson, Irene Smith, May charged ‘What about that? Welliver, J ling, had distributed as yuletide gifts. ‘Hacetotone Gal 1 fave felliver, Jean Semling, and Helen served without-pay. The committee NO CHICKEN FOR PAPA decided Hamilton is to receive $25,000 The ee ee award ae @ year for his services. Does anyone/jang Georgia Mason, Evelyn Nelson, ev. Winnipes, Siens peelay 6 18 01 Raral Church Notices/ Mission Church, East of Wilton three children had doubt that he will earn it? Virgil Senzek, Helen (ase edly ae . B. Bergland, Pasto if Z man Solberg, and Evelyn Thorn! Sees Farl Alcohol Ta at yaeal Ee AV one Sorell . saland Eligabeth qualified for the 40-50 As Agricultural Aid| *. ward, wile Ben Sax, Jaa ap Semling, Wande Stroup, Atchiaog, ea» icgaetiegepelenely Ode and Grace Wiloox wrote 30-40 men bod nce m=! words minute with 5 errors or Independents Take istry, both familiar with farm woee,] jeu, " December predicted ° Saturday that power alco- a ee One From Holsteins i . .46| hol within 10 years will become en KILLER KIDNAPS MAN . soopomly force in American agricul- janine Mes nee. 26.—()—A man Salem, —_ nt lent as Claude Mc- an Ni I De ane Back of this statement by Dr. Leo|Gee, escaped murderer, kidnaped Wil- city defeated the local high school Ibs. '43| M. Christensen and Dr. Harry Miller|liam Hicks, filling station operator, aquad, 20 to 18, in a game which! No . 42] was three months of commercial pro-| Saturday in Hicks’ automobile. found ' duction on @ research basis of anhy- drous (water free) alcohol, made| Glacial Lake Agassiz that once ex- from a wide variety of farm grown} tended into North Dekota was larger raw materials. than is any lake in the United States Laboratory experiments over & today including Lake Superior. PARAMOUNT Ends Today (Sat.) A GAY ROMANCE OF THE FAR EAST SEE SHIRLEY IN HER HAPPIEST MUSICAL SHOW Binning Dec. 28, at 7:3 rdlally favited to attend Sample Grain: 49 lbs., 1.36; 45 lbs., 1.35; 41 lbs., 1.33; 37 Ibs., 1.32, No, 1 hard amber durum durum : E FS33e rf — et a WP ShiMoyT EMPLE | ‘STOWAWAY Is! c Nas = NEXS Births Son to Mr. and Mrs. L, E, House 413% Thayer, west, at 10 a, m., Fri day, at Bismarck hospital ly al enced swimmer, said she did not note r, te Son to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stein, McClusky, 5 p. m., Friday, St, Alexius hospital. Son to Mr, and Mrs, James Know- len, Menoke . m,, Saturda; St. Alexius nis, Flasher, 6 Bismarck hospita m,, Saturda local hospita eulah, 9:20 m, Friday, local ‘hospital. Ys Ys rmer near Dris- bh a. New limitations placed on livestock feed loans from the Resettlement ad- ministration will not be applicable in North Dakota because funds for such purposes have been exhausted, North Dakota resettlement officials said Sat- urday. Boy Scout Board to Meet Monday Night Members of the board of review of the Boy Scouts of America will meet at the high school between 7 and 7:30 Pp. m. Monday, W. F. McGraw, local scout commissioner, anounced Satu! r= day. This will be the last meeting of the board before the next court of honor, PLANT RESUMES WORK Detroit, Dec. 26— (#) —Detroit plants of the Kelsey-Hayes company, where a strike was settled Wednesday night, resumed operations in part Saturday. SSS | Boy Happy Despite Omaha, Neb., Dec. 26.—)i— Three-year-old Johnny Hernandez did what doctors at the county hospital feared he couldn't do— live to celebrate Christmas. The pain in his body eased by sedatives, he showed an interest in all the activity going on about him, beamed over the gifts he re- ceived from a stream of visitors and gazed wonderingly at the big stack of mail beside his bed. That mail had come from every part of the nation. He didn't see Santa Claus Christmas eve, but he knew Santa had come. There were gifts from the good saint to prove it. It was Johnny’s first Christmas and, the doctors said, his last. They explained the boy's ailment, cancer of the bone, was beyond cure. They said he would die s00n, The boy, son of an impover- ished Mexican couple, hadn't heard the Christmas story until his nurses related it to him sev- eral fd ago. o | Approach of Death —+ make a special effort to attend the| able early in the w and go to the Socialists’ aid. Hints of ill winds to blow from con-|tneffectually at tough, new armored |. \ STATE Theater Saturday - Sunday “A Son Comes Home” A Paramount Picture with MARY BOLAND Also Comedy - News - Serial 7&9 P.M. 10c and 20c admission For SUNDAY DINNER ROAST TURKEY 50c soe > 65c Served from 11:30 a. m. till 8:30 p.m. Grand Pacific Restaurant TY NC) |on the reportorial statt of the MILL (I P NT’S New York Morning Sun, Later became London correspondent for the Sun and then managing editor © -Man From Drowning) FLAXSEED CARGOIS |(ofur i wena, HELD BY SPANIARDS i izes sox eer American Firm Protests State Department Action of | salary of $15,000 for the sake of try- Spanish Officers was trying to exist with a circulation — of only 40,000. Convinced that he to |could raise the circulation and save the Journal, he gave up his World ing out his own ideas on the Journal at a salary of $8,000 a year. Circulation Leaps Washington, Dec. 26— (#) —The| Within four months the Journal Minneapolis has asked the state de- partment to aid it in recovering @ $400,000 shipment of flaxseed which the high seas” by the Spanish gov- ernment. ish In a telegram T. L. Daniels, vice president of the company, said a cargo of more than 7,000 tons of Argentine flax seed was shipped Dec, 3 from Buenos Aires on the steamship Motomar, flying the Span- flag. “Wednesday, Daniels said, commander radioed our agent Garcis and Diaz company, New York, that the “steamer sails under direct and absolute orders from the government of the Spanish republic.” Daniels said the message to his agent came from the vicinity of Puerto Rico and he understood “the Spanish ambassador at Washington had ordered the vessel to proceed to Vewa Cruz, Mexio.” The artment, it learned, has cabled Spain but so f has had no reply. State department officials declined comment when asked whether they had talked with Archer Daniels-Midland company of to an unprecedented circula- the Spanish ambassador. mew's church, at Park avenue and Interment will be at the 50th street from page ene: C 0) N T I N U E D/: ue reais Producer Arthur Brisbane’s Typewriter Stilled Brisbane estate, Allaire, N. J. es Six in Family bane. Brisbane was long looked upon by the laity as the epitome of journal- istic success. His salary from apers amounted to $260,- Hearst news 000 a year and he had a claimed reading public of between 30,000,000 and 40,000,000 people. The popular picture of him was vivid enough to obscure the fact that he was a successful real estate op- erator, epjoying in that field as much | or more income than he received 85} manwood, N, J. At the latter place an for Any person able to read could grasp the Brisbane ideas, for he sought to surround every incident of which he wrote with human interest, with the little things that appealed to the most For Washington's birthda: for example, he discussed the size the His observations were never aimed at the sophisticate, and if the res quent dispargement of his editorial by intellectuals ever came to his no- an eter al yierios ce rey, ed tice, it feft him outwardly unruffled. He A Star Overnight in “Let's Sing Again” people. editor. He found time, as well, social activities. first. president's feet. Ignored Dispargement never mentioned {i in print. He began his career as a news- paperman on his 19th birthday, when, returning from five years of study in France and Germany, he won a place widow, who is the form- er Phoebe Cary of New York, Bris- bane is survived by five children: a son, Seward, and four daughters, Mrs. McCrary, Emily, Alice and Elinor Bris- tion figure and up with it went Bris- bane’s salary, this being part of his agreement with William Randolph Hearst. It was this job which turned Brisbane to editorial writing and it was his editorials that turned the circulation up, quite by accident. His - first move was to hire a new edi writer. The man he selected was & fortnight late in arriving. Brisbane pinch-hit with his simple style, and Journal readers clamored for more. In 1918 he took over the editorship of the Chicago Herald and Examiner but did not relinquish the editorship of the Journal! until 1921. His chief work, though, was writing for the Hearst syndicate. He kept his office in New York. He purchased the Washington Times in 1917 and the Evening Wise consin of Milwaukee in 1918, selling both to Hearst in 1919. Brisbane turned out his columns with great speed. He dictated them while glancing over late editions of the evening papers and usually had 1,200 to 1,500 words complete within 30 minutes. As he started for his home across the Hudson from New Yor’: he frequently would take a sec= “the wi retary with him and make corrections Once, when starting a vacation, he is said to have turned out 30 edi- torlals in three hours so that the Evening Journal would have a supply until his return. Wherever he went, regardless of the conveyance, he had a dictating machine and a secretary to transcribe the sentences which he spoke into it. It was standard equipment for his automobile. On train trips he used sleeping car compartments for offices and the Pullman company was charged with seeing that the latest editions of papers in the territory which he was traversing were await- ing him at stations. Brisbane was born in Buffalo, N. Y., Dec, 12, 1864. His parents were Albert and Sarah White Brisbane and he described his father as “mod- erately well off and able to send me abroad to study.” That study abroad came after he had received an early education in the public schools at Buffalo and the he taught a Bible class in a Sunday school. On July 20, 1912, he married Phoebe. Cary in New York. NO DIVIDENDS EARNED Washington, Dec. 26.— (#) —In- formed sources predicted Saturday a final checkup will show the federal reserve banks did not earn their dividends this year. The banks must pay a 6 per cent dividend on stocks held by member banks. The board of surplus only when’ earnings are less than 6 per cent. “The Bismarck Tribune now oe ie new telephone number— CAPITOL Today and Sun. A COLLEGE Invented this Miracle Pen to Guard All Students ia (from Pens that Suddenly Run Dry CHARLES BUTTERWORTH will theill you again when he sings again in RAINBOW On THE RIVER With MAY ROBSON and the famous Hall johnson Choir 4 Shows Sun. at2-4-7-9 PROFESSOR -