The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 11, 1921, Page 8

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cei CIS UNIVERSITY TO NEW PRESIDENT Elaborate Ceremonies to Mark | Induction of L. D. Coffman Head of Minnesota U. Minneapolis, Minn., May 11.—A hol-! {day air pervaded the campus of the University: of Minnesota as final ar- rangements were being” completed to- day for the inauguration of Lotud Delta Coffman as president of the uni- versity, on Frid orning. ‘The in- auguration ceremonies will cover a period of three days, beginning tomor- | row with Cap and Gown day and con- tinuing until Saturday noon. Reviving a custom not in vogue for | fen years, students at the -univer will have the opportunity of observ-; ing the inauguration of their presi- nt for the first time since 1911, when | e KH. Vincent was formally: head of the institution. | Due to t ountry being at ar against Ger y in 1917 when the sumption of Dr. Marion LeRoy Bu ton to,the presidency took place, all} 7 foymalit connected with the! event were dispensed with. i Representatives of unive all over the world, most of them from | this country,. however, were arriving | today and a number of others, are ex-) pected tomorrow and Friday. | ‘The at; | tendance will include. presidents, at} many of the prominent. educational ‘ine | stitutions in this country and abroad, representatives of the National Edn- association and similar or- ions, regents of the Minnesota ty, members of.the state leg- initiated Thereiis ; mence to enrich your bloud apd revitalize your ‘wart out exhausted nerves— will. not injure they disturbthesteaach; Tt! for almost immediate tion and assimilation by the Dood while some physicians ‘atall. If you fre not strong. well you owe it to yourself to make the following tést: See bow Jeng youcan work or how far you can walk without be- coming tired. [ test your see how much you have gained. Your money wil be refunded by the, manufacturers if you do not obtain perfectly heomaraqacth Tesulte, “tall droggists. . Cu Univernish |, [enna with { ( Tansparent 4 of Save the surface yo and you save all i Ordinary products never shop. Once the master pain tor wins his reputation, he up to it. standards. They have sacrificed none ers. Some are patented and ‘masterpiece. ting the Herrick. INAUGURATE ITS . slature, Sutra? | BOLSHEVIKS DON’T right, reading down, Miss Alice Mrs. Iva Cross. Wemen who will govern Thayer—Center, Mrs. A :H. Forest, | | mayor ; upper left, Mrs. Daisy Savage; lower left, Mrs. Ina Craig; | Lambortsan, Mrs. Eunice Rash, tate officials and a number of city and county heads from the en- tire state. Surrounded by three of his four | predecessors—the trio of presidents emeritus who went through formal in-+ auguration ceremoines—Dr. Coffman wil formally take office following eulogistic addresses by the first and second presidents of the University ot Minnesota. William Watts. Folwell, first presi- dent of the institution from the time it .was organized in 1869 until 1884, will open the inaugural session with an address Friday morning. Dr. Cy- rus Northrop, who succeeded Dr. Fol- well in 1884 and continuedin office un- til 1911, when Dr. George Vincent as- sumed the helm, will follow also with an address, The actual presentation of Dr. Coff- man then will be made by Fred B. Roard of Regents, after which Presi- dent Coffman’ will deliver his inaug- urat address. Although Dr. Vincent will be present at the exercises, he will not speak until Friday night at the auditorium of. the university farm in St. Paul. PERMIT SUSPECTS | CHOICE OF HOME Riga. ‘May 11.—Choice of a home is not. permitted in the land of the Bot- sheviki} according ‘to’ persons reach- ing here from: Russia. ‘Everything be- longs to the government which as- signs living quarters. Special barracks have been assigned to persons from America as Soviet authorities consider them unreliable rebels that must be kept apart from Snyder, president of the University | « othe Everybody * knows | these “Americans” by thelr sad faces and dismal silence. They. do, not answer. if spoken to ‘in Russian, but their faces brighten if some one appears who knows English, and especially the American vernacular. “Don't you speak English?” fs their first question, followed quickly by tho | inevitable second: . “Is there any way to get back to America?” | But there is no way out, for Russia-is locked from within. WANT VOIGE IN CONTROL OF CLOSED BANKS: Minot, N. D,, May 11—A demand that the state banks of North Dakota, | which, under the depositors’. guar- | antee fund law. assume the liability of { closed banks, should have some hand | “Any U. S. Tire daa universal full- money's THE U.S. ROYAL CORD A famous tire—and a: famous tread. i Acknowledged among motorists and deblers alike as the world’s foremost “example of Cord tire building. Al- | ‘ways delivering the same repeated | economy, tire after tire, and season | y ~~ after season. 3! ' The stripe around the sidewall is = registered as @ trade-mark inthe U. S, Patent Office, ifferent tire views that come out in achance talk at the curb or in the leisure of a friend’s garage. Almost every day youcome across the man human enough to believe he can: outguess the cut-price tag on “job- lots,” “discontinued lines” and “surplus stocks.” His opposite is the hard- pan car owner who sticks year in and year out to a standard brand as the only rational economy. in determining how these closed inati- eer s s hd curions pheula be managed and. thei* affairs liquidated, was voiced by’ A. E.! Marniy: will scarc! Sevareid, cashter of the Merchants | \ y penepee. bod ity State bank of Velva and ‘president of | nae of U.S. Tires’ last year. the northwestern digtrict ‘of the North Dakota’ Bankers association, in ‘his , A at the: time, but a: ‘bene: address to the annual. convention of a fit riow. afeno U, S. Tires to be ‘6 Fi the district association which opened in Minot this afternoon, with more than 100 banks in the northwestern part: of North Dakota represented. “At the present time,” he. declared, “there are betwen 30. and 40 banks closed in North Dakota and practical- ly all. of them are state banks and come under the guarantee fund Jaw. It ig reasonable to assume. that in each bank unable: to reopen for .busi- ness; there will. be a loss: We, who are members of the guarantee fund.; which means all state banks, have a3-{ worked off—no accumulations— no forced selling of any U. S. brand — no . shipping of tires from one part of tie United States Tires. EN it's surprising ‘the number ‘you can measure tire value in ig — country to another to “find a market.” * * 'e There are 92 U.S, Factory Branches. . Each one gets its share of U.S. Tires. There is a broad, constant, even dis- tribution of U. S. Tires always going. ;; ; on from these Branches to the dealer, Buy a U.S, Tire anywhere in acommunity of 500people or even less—and-you get a fresh, live tire of. current production—with all the orig- inal service and mileage the factory put into it. The owner of a medium or light-weight car stands on equal ground. with aL car owner, ‘Any United States Tire i a uni- versal full money’s worth—backed up with a leadership policy. of equal : quality, buying convenience and price for everybody. sumed this lability. We have virtu-| “Maarphy Univernish “Impervious to Boiling Water ally stepped into the shoes of the| stockholders of these banks and have assumed their responsibilities but we! have nothing to do or nothing to say about receiverships or management or, Mquidation, of these defunct banks, and still we are sponsors and guar+ antors. “It would appear that we should be! permitted to investigate these matters and also devise and apply our own) methods in handling this in conjunc- specifying Murphy mcterials, when t.down your high labor costs by MANY TRANSFERS tion ‘With the banking board. also very ‘probable that directors and officers of some of these defunct banks have been unnecessarily delya- quent and negligent in. their, duties, thereby making’ themselves able.” 812 Rosser St. = CENSUS REVEALS POPULATION | United States @ Rubber Company C. W. HENZLER, Dealer Tire Sales and Vulcanizing. Phone 725 { from pal is of two others (Billings | is 13.6 per cént, as compared to 11-per and Morton counties), since 1910. cent in 1910, and 7.3 per cent in 1990. The 1920. population of the largest Fargo, 21,961; Grand Minot, Don’t ferget to ‘see Norma TREND IN DEC DE IN N. D KOT For “uae Jamestown, 6,627; Dev- A A A K, 7,122: 5s te 6.6: : ms Talmadge. in “The Pastion ils Lak e, 5,140. ee Flower.” Eltinge today and to- The percentage of urban population | MOrrow. The census bulletin of the United ‘OF REAL ESTATE States. government, giving census fig- ARE RECORDED [tit mang interening tacts relating to the sta Real estate “tranafers recorded in i Ke the office of the register of deeds ot Norttt Dakota's population is 646, Burleigh county include:- oe an increase of-12.1 per cent over Bert G. Spohn and wife to Clarence | }® W. Porter and wife, house at 504 Ninth street, Bismarck. Orville Sperry and wife to W. J. Sperry. N. P. 2nd addition, lots 6 and The total: land area of the state is 70,183 square miles. The average number. of inhabitants to the square mile in 1920 was 9.2, as against 8.2 in 1910. There are 53 counties in’ the state, 1,268 civil townships, 297 unorganized | ° townships, 212 school townships, 32 school districts, 92 cities, 198 villages and two towns. ° The urban, population .persona liv-, ing in places having 2,500 or more inhabitants, is 88,234, as compared to 558,838 in rural territory. | The. percentage. of} population -llv- ing in rural territory/in- 1920 was 86. re compared to 89.0 in 1910, and 92.7 in 1900. Four of the counties, Golden Valley, Sioux, Grant and Slope, were formed | you decorate.. Murphy’s means as- surance of many years of protection and hence great saving in the labor Univernishis a hard, elastic varnish that gives a surface as durable and toughasglass. A coat of this will make easy to sweep or towash—-impervious For over fifty years Murphy’s has been preserving beautiful, surfaces. We can supply you with Univer- nish in any of the popular colors. THE MASTER REFRIGERATOR Just so the master builders of the Master refrigerator, The Herrick, have guarded against lowering their quality features that make the Herrick most desirable. these features, of course, have been copied by other mak- tation of. the Herrick has ever been made equal to this To profit by ALL these improvements INSIST on get- Prices range from $34.00 to $58.00 FRENCH & WELCH HARDWARE CO. “The Winchester Store.” t ierenints and Manufacturers bank to Mary W. Anderson, NE 1-4, Sec. 32, Twp. 142, Range 80. F. B. Bell and: wife to Allen A. Chapin, part of NW 1-4, Sec. 21, Twp, 139, Range 75. Georgiana Taylor and husband to Mathias P.'Boespeng, Williams Ad., lot 2, block 80. , Helen A. Hedden and husband, to Mrs. C. E. Hoover, Riverview Ad., lot 2, block 3. Thomas Casey to H. W, Gray, So. “Wilton, lot.3, block 1. jj Blanche L. Hanwell ‘and husband to August Trygg, house and lot,.914 Ave- nue B, Bismarck. Edna B. Matchen to’ A. W.-Luca3;! undivided one-half interest in lots. 3| and 4 of block 50 of original plat of! Bismarck. ~ Everett. L. Bond to J: 1. Case| Threshing Machine Co., west 1-2 of SW 1-4 of ‘Sec».32,.. Twp::143,: Range 75, 80 acres more or less. Dakota Trust Company ‘to Herman Ode, lots 12, 13, 14 and 15, block 41, Fisher’s addition;: Bismarck. Bankers Farm: Mortgage Company, of Minnesota, to First National Bank of Taylor, all of lots 11 and 12, in block 12, Sturgis addition, Bismarck, with exceptjon. Mary W, ‘Anderson fo C, E. Manson, both of Minnesota, NE 1-4 of Sec. 32, Two. 142, North of Range 80. Sam Krueger and Sabry Krueger, of Driscoll, to J. E. Tierney, the SE 1-4 of S 20, in Twp. 140, North Range 75. redecorating. ur woodwork bright and smooth— water, even if boiling hot. come from a master’s work- ter, poet, musician or sculp- strives continuously. to live of the twenty-seven unusual Some of can’t be copied. But no int Don’t forget, to: see Normal: Talmadge in “The Passion morrow. | Flower.” Eltinge today and to ‘ FOR PERM AENES Concrete Roads double the load, save time and shorten the route. Any day, any season, you can drive with safety on Concrete. \ \ PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION Sen Franciece Seattle ONCRETE LTING THEATRE A Matinee Daily, 2:30 p. m. Evening, FEATURE PICTURE begins at 8 and)9:30 unless otherwise specified. , Program subject to ogance without matics: 7:30 and 9. TODAY — ‘TOMORROW NORMA . the Spanish beauty. for whose rane men fought, in Jacinto Benavente’s vivid play ‘The Passion Flower’ You'll smile with her smiles, sob with her sobs, love with her love, hate with her hate. Also- Showing “READY TO SERVE” Featuring “Snooky” The Humanzee in the Character of a Farm Hand. Two Reels of Laughter at Aston- ishing “Antics of This Almost Human Animal. COMING FRIDAY & SAT, MAY 13-14 Douglas MacLean in ‘The Homestretch’ & » +’ * my sty ” oe , a 4 * ¥

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