The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 13, 1922, Page 3

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- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 2 MURDERER IS SERVING SECOND MONDAY, FEBRUARY. 13, ’22 PAGE THREE even A ‘other favorites—two shillings (nor- ILLIONS Wines — Port and Spanish—Two |‘ | shillings, : ‘Champagne—Forty, shillings. CAPITOL THEATRE TONIGHT & TOMORROW *S Admission only 35¢ and 15c. of thin, run. Beer costs as much as whigky—two | oars shillings, : - u R JUDGE MILLER SNe cated Wel ead deve oan: AT LAST! REX INGRAM’S LONG PROMISED SUCCESSO | — [zest one f'n ay Ba Pefoundthe | Reine TO HIS COLOSSAL “FOUR HORSEMEN of the APOCALYPSE” Rey New Federal Judge For North Haale cea we will have to joysofsplen- | Pardoned While Serving First Dakota Speaks at Banquet in Eleven passenger aerial. Pullmans aid eet Sentence, Goes and Kills A Faithful Al Fulfiliment i” . A are in operation between Florida and y-taking 4 ° His Honor Given Here ports farther away than Bimini—Nas- Another One Adaprtion of of Ingram s -_- sau, Havana and others.. Frantiort Ky tre 13 Seta Balzac’s Pledge to rankfort, Ky., Feb. 13.—Si F - MANY LAWYERS SPEAK ing, who is serving his socond lit F. UG x BREET ILL PUBLISH | sentence for murder, has 3 fr amous World ‘ the. presidency of the Mutual Welfe fe Representatives of Bar of Other | | Laszue, an ersaniaation of risa a Novel : oe iu Cities Felicitate the New THE D | A R Y OF oa in the State Reformatory hot he Eugenie ree : , 2 conce \ Judge ILDS YOU UP \superintendent, largely is the creature Grandet th jy \ Ae of Fleming's constructive efforts, The i °. rhe G “Th COL e UE KIGa cha ttGa| COUNT TOLSTO! and helps you regain league i charged with providing rec- os Director- ave no‘other ambition than to 4 reation for the inmates of ‘the prison, B " make a just and humane judge, and} your normal weight looks ‘after the amusements and es- Genius U to render just service,” said ‘Andrew | tablishes a standard of duct fo the be,” sai ., ablishes a standard of conduct for its + as Miller, federal judge for North Da- Th Ur blished Works To B Sold by all good druggists members, demanding that they main- AA Soul- Maste kota, to 200 men and women from|+"ree Unpublishet orks Lo be | tain the standard if they enjoy its Gripping eer Bismarck and other parts of the state, Included In The Memorial 7 | benefits. of His f ata banquet’ given in his honor at ! provisions of the hail law which the! Fleming, the former president, and) Romance Craft U the McKenzie hotel Saturday night. \.| Edition ‘amendment made possible, | who still devotes much time afd study Ta Judge Miller, called ufon for re- | In setting forth the provisions of| to the league, has the unusual record of Greed marks by Major J. M. Hanley, of Man- a oe the contract between the: Industrial; of now serving his second life sen- and 3 s ie dan, toastmasters after felicitations| Moscow, Feb. 13.—Three unpublish-| commission and the Minnesota Loan & | tence for murder, He was pardoned ‘ : : had been extended by many speak-|€d works of Count Leo Tolstoi are tv! trust Company, and Lane, Piper and| while serving his first sentence,/“In Passions e . ers, responded briefly. Judge Miller | be included in the Memorial edition| Jaffray, Inc., the opinion states:that| 1915 he again killed a man and again | a - \) 4 expressed the appreciation of Mrs.| of his works which his daughters are|the companies in general “agree to| received a life sentence. i 3 s i Miller and himself for the evidence| planning to issue. purchase any and all warrants is-|. The welfare feature of the league of good will and fellowship. ‘The most important of these is his| sued for 1921 hail losses that may be/ has Fleming's chief-interest, It looks 6e e ” i The President and the Senate had| diary, which will run to eight vul-joffered to them at the following] after thewlependents of its members, | placed in him great power and author-| umes of 500 pages each. The diary| rates: All’ warrants, offered andj cares for its members when they are 3 ity, Judge Miller said, as a part of the} was begun in 1850 and continued to| purchased during February, 1922 at} sick, by providing delicacies and pays \ ‘ administration of the government, and | 1870, without a break, then abandon-|98 per cent; during March, 1922 at 98| funeral expenses if they or any of wt it had been found necessary to lodge] eq until 1889, when the great writer| 1-2 per cent; during April, 1922, at| their dependents die. that great power and responsibility in! renewed it.and kept it until two days|99 per cent; during May, 1922, at “It helps the men to know that their i. a federal judge. ’ for| before his death in 1910. 99 1-2 per cent and during June, 1922,/ families are being cared for,” Flem- : k “Tf any man used that power for a z aest ry at 100 per cent of the principal or|ing says, “and will keep many a wife °. ; his own aggrandizement, or to punish| ,72¢ first 20-year period of the diary| +... amounts of such warrants. The) faithful until her husband gets out, with AMERICA’S IDEAL SCREEN LOVERS Garcribes his life as a soldier in the jnaustrial Commission agrees to re-|in my opinion. A woman with de- would have forgotten the purpose of | Caucasus, during the siege of Sebast-| purchase from the Minnesota Loan; pendent children and her husband in that great power,” said Judge Miller. ogol and his marriage. The second) anq Trust Company, and Lane, Piper| here has a hard outlook Stating that he believed he appre-| Period of the dairy is less personal) anq Jaffray, Inc, all hail warrants| Tangible achievements in the year ' ciated as far as one may the power| and devoted to questions of religion,| which they have so purchased from of the league's existence are consid- and responsbility, he concluded by| Philosophy and politics. the holders thereof, and to issue in| ered remarkable by the superintend- 1 saying that “I have no other ambi-| / A second of the unpublished works] payment thereof, the notes of the In-/ent. Nothwistanding the fact that a an enemy or to reward a friend, he RUDOLPH VALENTINO - and ALICE TERRY tion than to make a just and humane| is an unfinished romance called “The! dustrial Commission dated December | large majority of the prisoner's prac- judge and render just service impar-| Story of Peter the Great,” and deals|1, 1921, and bearing interest at the tically are destitute, their league has Famed Principals of “The Four Horsemen” those Brilliant Portrayals tially to all.” with revolutionary plots of that time.| rate of 6 per cent per annum from/spent in cash $2,300 improving the in“ The Conquering Power” Have Furnished Two Distinctive The banquet was preceded by a re-| The third work is a comedy in five! the date thereof. baseball diamond, $850 for band uni- F Contributions to the Motion Picture Art J ception held in | Patterson hall at| acts, “The Nihilist,” written in 1860, forms and instruments, $1,500 on its i ‘ THE WORLD'S GREATEST REVIEWERS ARE UNANIMOUS IN ACCLAIMING “THE q which Judge and Mrs. Miller were { -hair ; ‘commissary and office fixtures, and [boking, fun. ats shortshalred_ women ZEY PREVOST, |has accumulated about $500 worth of greeted. : “ | long-bearded idealists and other Rus- ; Judge Bronson Speaks, sian types. It was refused by the WITNESS, IS stage, properties. These purchases Toastmaster Hanley read a the NOW MISSI G were nade Dose ble by the operation lof a store by the prisone nae Art theater, of those days, a fact} panauet paneer a ws aa which made #he author downhearted. | set ABs PR Henry Halverson, member of the Mil-| _ Other than these three works, there! san prancisco, Feb. 13—A “foreign! Attend the Big Valentine ler reception committee, led the sing-| 47e @ large number of unpublished or) .yppoena” for Miss Zoey Prevost, an |Party in St. Mary’s Auditorium ing of some favorite songs. incomplete short stories to be issued. | eye witness for the prosecution in the | dd: Gvmnasi Feb Judge H. E. Bronson was introducea| AS Tolstoi made his daughters | manslaughter case of Roscoe C. (Fat- | ymnasium on Feb, , 14. as the first speaker, his~subject be-| Promise not to copyright any of his/ty) Arbuckle, is to put into the hands f works, after his life rule, these newjof evety sheriff in the state for ser-| works will be published simultan-|yicc, as a résult of Miss Prevost’s dis- | ing “Ends of Justice.” He referred to the judgeship contest and said that i no strife is so bitter as that among} eously throughout the world. appearance, it was announced by! former friends or families, and added —_—__——— {District Attorney Brady, Brady said| that when the smoke of battle has ‘ne had reliable information that Miss | cleared away ood ditizenship de- DECISION Prevost boarded a train here last | . mands good fellowship and concord. hed The President and Senate, he said, New: Orleans. |, Ditorts to find Miss Prevost within and Bismarck, and added that “The the state are intended to pave the Presidem and Senate have known | Way for the reading of her testimony him, he had been judged and found not wanting.” the district bench; said that he took begin March 13, Brady said. the opportunity not only of saluting | Judge Miller personally but as a rep-| Commencement of Purchase of resentative of the district judiciary. 7 xt i DANDERINE Hail Warrants Awaits Ac- sired by members of the legal pro- | ——_- | Stors Hair Coming Out; et Purchase of North Dakota’s 1921 | thickens, Beautifies. the two firms in Minneapolis, who | man on the federal bench in whose/ are jointly, financing the propostion, |> disposition there is no rancor andj have received the approval upon the | e a who has a forgiveable nature.” decision of the North Dakota Supreme j Monday after buying a ticket for has signally honored Judge Miller jin Arbuckle’s two former trials in ei TIN j the event that she cannot be located Judge J. A._ Coffey, speaking for before the third: trial, scheduled to t There is no high position more de- tion of Bond Attorneys hail warrants will begin as soon as | George Thorpe, of Jamestown, de-| Court in the recen { CONQUERING POWER" AN ACHIEVEMENT NO LESS NOTEWORTHY THAN INGRAM’S “FOUR HORSEMEN,” PRONOUNCING IT THE REALLY BIG PICTURE OF THE YEAR! Given by the Foresters. 5 piece orchestra. ACCORDION — KNIFE AND BOX PLEATING We have just installed a ‘complete pleating outfit. No more need for the people of Bismarck and vicinity to send their pleating away to be done. Our prices lower than | others. Two day service. CITY CLEANERS AND DYERS 422 Broadway. Bismarck, N. D. Our Glove Cleaning Machine Awaits Your Orders. ves Old Sweet Jong All over again on Valentines: ay chruary the 14h \ EMEMBER in your boyhood LY R days how you shyly sent her_a Valentine. TODAY—perpetuate this splen- did old time custom by sending a Flower Valentine to sweet- heart, wife or mother. SUGGESTIONS: Corsage Bouquets -RI ALT O-= THEATRE $1.50 to $6.00 © fession than that of a place upon the federal bench, he said. He spoke of his long friendship with Judge Miller and said that “I ibelieve it fortunate for the people of the state to have a ‘Flowering Plants $1.00 up Valentine Bas! Bismarck, injunction case! clared that Judge Miller would go op the bench with a character not only+ proven in his own conscience and in the minds of his friends, but with a character that had stood up in a fight. Capt. I. P. Baker spoke of the days in Dakota territory when there was little law except that of the vigilantes. It was the desire of the people, he said, that determined what the law should be, and it was the duty of every citizen to support the court, from a firm of Chicago attorneys to} whom they submit questions of legal points upon financial matters. A cer- tified copy of the opinion left Bis- marck on the first train after the de-j| cision was handed down and decision of the attorneys upon the points sub- mitted to them is expected in the course of a day or two. | The, companies have made all ar-| rang@ments to make immediate pur- | chases as soon as they receive legal! assurance that the de on protects \Ss SPECIAL NOTICE © THE FRIVOLITY GIRL Will Play a Special Matinee Today and Two wy and to remember that our courts are} the buyers of the securities. Moneys Te a) " 7 7 no better than we. Judge Miller, he] already are in Bismarck to begin the| N ight Shows, Presenting sat could alter’ to forge! all past} purchase and additional credit will) unkindness in the administratiqn of| be furnished as desired. The war-| “ ma 99 his duties. rants probably will be purchased| HI i) AND BITS : a a peber ice Mandan, who ‘was| through the First National Bank. x ‘ introduced the toastmaster as hav-| Compl vas given the In- 7 : : jing been chosen to represent ‘the dustrial Oe iesion to ake good its| i x This Is Your Last Chance Mandan bar, which had almost unan-| contract when the supreme court de-| eps Gler \ / imously endorsed Judge Miller;~said| nied the injunction requested by Otto . ee do that he knew that Judge Miller would| Bauer, who instituted a friendly suit] 35-cents buys a bottle of “Dander- —TO SEE— administer the laws conscientiously| for the financial organizations to set-|ine” at any drug store. After one ap- he on fe ‘bench ond that the people|tle certain questions which had not/ plication ofthis delightful tonic you | : . = GIRL CO.” will be proud of him. before ‘been presented to the court./cannot find a particle of dandruff or a} Opn Wh Visit to Attorney-General The decision covered the entire field|faliing hair. Besides, every hair} T HE I RIVOLITY R ee sudge a L. Berry, of the district| of the contract and the powers of the | shows new life, - yleOr. brigntness, court, felicitated Judge Miller and| Industrial Commission in dealing!more color and abundance. ‘s 4 the citizens of the twin cities of the] with the questions raised concerning | i Feature Picture ~ Soe: pe fact thal Judge Miller|the operation of the hail Mati | wou ave his chambers here meant| laws. ITERS | * tH 6 ” that he would “stay “with us and Entire Law Covered | TYPEWR | Alice Brady in ‘Hush Money. = weil stay with him,” Judge Berry! The entire course of the hail in-/ - Perper psec | ; said. surance legislation in the state is set ; - i “e . - Sam H. Clark welcomed Judge Mil-|forth in the opinion, beginning with | Bismarck ——DON’T MISS TODAY’S SHOW—— + ler home as a representative citizen|the adoption of a constitutional | Typewriter Co. || TONIGHT and friend and referred with sarcasm |amendment in 1918 at the general elec- | Bismarck, to the attacks made upon Judge Mil-! tion and the subsequent passage of, - D. and Tomorrow ler, f. laws making operative: the different | 5 Judge Hanley, who was counsel for | Monday and Tuesday. Mr, Miller in Washington, said that 7 etter the hearings had Seneluded in} F O e 9 | Vashington, he went with Mr. Miller lin: Gri i ¥ vi illag ty see ane Attorney-General of the! ee g 5 PPy: 9 ; SOUTH SIBE | ae Page Bue ds Jnited States. i | i ‘ ‘The Attorney-General turned to Cold Coming On? MERCANTILE | fame. Then, wearied, she Mr. Miller and said, ‘I've investigated feos i | | married, thinking wealth " RY, tickling sensation in the | 3 your life from boyhood and I find 5 | vould solve all life’s prob- ( nothing in your life that you need be throat, headache, feverish, eyes | STORE oe ke Dro - : 3 \ ashamed of” Judge Hanley declared, ache. Don’t play with that on-coming | | lems. = Cp) 77% amid cheers. - gold. Get De, Ting ¢ New, Discovery. 222 9th St. South } That began the real strug- THEATRE “ “ A Sere: takes hold and eases the cough, loosens Morris Zovorist, Prop. | gle — for love and happi- Direction Valleau Theater Compan 9 e pany Highball Special’s the phlegm and relieves the congestion | ness! Come and’ see her . | , in the eyes and head, and soon breaks | : - ° in! Business Booms | tp the most obstinate attack of cad || Going Out of Business| win —_— and gri; | v 4 q By NEA Service, Childe: and grownups alike use it. | Ten More Days To Stay. ae MONDAY and TUESDAY jami, Fla., Feb. 13. — Forty-five harmful drugs, but just good | : ee eines nae minutes ‘trom’ Miami— No bam olds’ coughs sd arppe. \{ Remember the big sacrifice sale. LLOYD HAMILTON ETHEL CLAYTON Via the Highball Special— | Sold by your druggist for 60c. | Everything in ladies’, children’s tah 5 << a 9 in “WEALTH” Lies Bimini—the island of booze. Ki Ges |Pana ‘men’s. shoes; men’s. and ‘boys’ : 3 / in “THE ADVISOR BAC IE ReGen eat Stiok Dr. LIVQ'S Jinits mackinaws, sheep skin coats, ‘ LLOYD “HAM” HAMILTON in..“THE ADVISOR” Ny “The demand is greater than ever.”/ N@W DisCOVeEry || esther vests, men's, ladies and mi : said Henry A. Bruno, one of the man-! Por Cold: ad Co kis | children’s underwear, all kinds of / y Cx : agers of the aerial transportation| JOP COUAS ANG COUSES Ff cincs, dress goods, hosiery. Every- [| ; WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY company. “The four boats in- the} = 5 ‘I thing will be sold below manufac- ( * Fi | it in Half a Day? You thing will be s service are taxed to capacity. | -scutaat be i Your bowels were eet. [turing cost ’ ig WILLIAM D, TAYLOR'S PRODUCTION WILL ROGERS “Everybody e} anxious to pie ly. . King’s Pills | | : +95 over. for eat bowela Dei tesa fit | You'll save big money by com-fj | a \ in “A Poor Relation “But they all come back. for work. At all druggists 25c. ing here, even if you live milesf) { 5 “BY HECK” ae Pee ae high. Haveinecat PROMPT! WON'T GRIPE OB away i a 1 Pick Mack Sennett comedy..........+00005 B K” , his is what they are charging ai 9, Z f Pa mount Cpicture ——e ‘ the bars: T. King s Pills | deli Matinee Daily 2:30. Evenings 7:30 & 9 Cocktails — Manhattan, Bronx ani Yeoereccmememes! | A coer

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