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Gy’ WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1922 >—____________.___-¢ | SOCLALAND | | PERSONAL || ‘Xs. SUTRA READ, Gives Luncheon ‘for Sewing Club Members of the Tuesday Sewing Club were entertained at a 1 o’clock yin the summer school at the Dick- by. inson normal, 1 i * , funcheon yesterday afternoon E. H. L, Vesperman at. her e on 613 Ave. A. Mrs. R. J.i Beckley of Sioux Falls, 8. D was an honor guest and Mrs John Sul- livan of Mandan an “i out-of-town guest at the luncheon. The ladies spent the aftérnoon in playing, bridge and sewing. i Entertains i Bridge Club Mrs. 0, H. Lerum of 121 Thayer St. entertained the Tuesday Bridge club at her home yesterday afternoon, Mrs, J. I, Huyck received a favor for high score. At the close of the af- ternoon refreshments were served by the hostess. NURSES GO ON VACATION. Miss Cora Suckow, supervisor of the obstetri department at the Bis- marek h tal, has left for three: weeks’ visit with ,elatives at Havre, Mont. Miss Miriam Keidel is spend- ing a two-weeks vacation at the home of her parents at Mandan. Miss Alma Klussman has gone to her home ew Salem for a couple of weeks’ tion. Miss Margaret Jernigan is ; speriding two weeks with relatives in ; Milwaukee, Wis. Misses’ Jennie Jen-| sen and Eleanor Stolberg, graduate! nurses from the Bismarck Hospital Training School for Nurses, have left; for a vacation in Seattle, Wash. After their vacation visit Misses Jensen and Sto!berg expect to take up the prac- tice of their profession in Seattle, ae TAKES ORPHAN TO RELATIVES. B. Newcomb, matron of the for the friendless has gone to St. Paul to deliver an orphan chil:! to a relative of the child who is coming from a point in Michigan. | » Mrs, Newcomb will then go to Fair- fj) mont, Minn., with another child who ff is to join his brother and sister in a home for dependent children. Be-| r2 returning she will spend some! time with relatives in the Twin Cities | L SUNDAY SCHOOL PICNIC. annual McCabe Methodist hoal picaic will be held at Chautauqua Park in Mandan Friday | afternoon, The Park Commission of | Mandan has courteously invited the people of Bismarck to use their new- ly improved park when they wish to have picnics. Automobiles will be} , ot ra the church at 3 o’clock to carry e crowd to the pienic grounds. All families are asked to bring their own lunch, cups and spoons, BOX BIRGHDAY TARTY. An invitation vox birthday: party was given by ‘Mrs, M. W. Pierce of % 600 Ave. D this xfternoon. in honor }s of the third birtnday of her little daughter, Miss Jean.’ Ten little tots received green and’ white invitation! / boxes to the party. In the center of | 4 ‘the dining room table appeared a big} yircen and white ox-pie with rib bons extending-out of the center. At- tached to the ribbons were favors jto those who see Gloria Swanson in the picture of that title at the El-| dayghter. who desire a teachers’ certificate of a higher grade than that given when eighth grade work has been completed are taking the examina- tions in Bismarck, SUPT. OF SCHOOLS ARRIVE Superintendent of Schools H. 0. Saxvik and wife have arrived in the} city. Mr. Saxvik has been teaching | RETURNS FROM VACATION Miss Cecile Hagen has returned from Mott, where she spent her va- cation with her parents, ‘ TO VISIT PARENTS. Miss Violet Palm left this morning for Lehr, where she will visit with her parents. CITY SHOPPER. Miss Alma Harper of Glen Ullin, was a city shopper here yesterday. Miss Frances Ornstott of James- town, left-this morning for her homo} after a short visit here with friends. Miss Lena Diehl of Dunn Center, shopped and visited here yesterday. John Tucker. of Devils Lake, was a business caller here yesterday. Mrs. William. Baerd of Halliday visited in the city today, Olaf Felthein of Braddock, was aj city visitor here today. Mrs. Edward DeHaan of Moffit, called | in the city today. ns v | CITY NEWS | —_—_— «Baby Girl. Mr. and Mrs. E. F, Jewell of Black- water announce the birth of a baby girl at the St. Alexius hospital yes-: terday. | Bismarck Hospital. Harold Sundstrom of Washburn, Verna Tilton ot Baldwin, August | Gutknecht of Hazen, and W. B. Cur ten of Fargo, have entered the Bis- marck hospital for’treatment. Mrs. William Koehler of Glen Ullin, Mrs. | Jacob Hazel of New Leipzig, Harry Thompson of the city, and Irene Arm- strong of Freida, have been dis- charged from the hospital. St. Alexius Hospital, Mrs, Jacob Wetch of Solen, J. P. Boucher of Stcele, Mrs, Peter Jacobs of Stanton, Master Edward Fisher of Dunn Center, Miss Cecilia Deane of Elbowoods, Bapy Benedict Schri- einer of Strassburg, have entered the St. Alexius hospital for treat- ment. Miss Margaret Taylor of Gar- rison, Miss Hazel Kitts of Garrison, Miss Cora Opland of Mott, Master Sheldon of Field City, and Nathan Silver of Wishek, have been dis- charged from the hospital. Se oa | AT THE MOVIES | THE ELTINGE tinge on Thursday and. Friday. The trademark in this case, is a gor- geously-dressed wife. The husband is which the little folks drew. Lunch: con was served in boxes decorated in} wealth by making a show of wealth. green and white. i RETURN FROM. AUTO TRIP }); Mr. and Mrs, G. E. © Wingreene @ ‘Wile trip through northern Minne- sota, stopping at Pine River, Bemid- ji, Itasca Park and other points have returned to their home. They were gone for there weeks. | husband and wife, gaining wealth and greatness, falls | today. not. wealthy, but, hopes. to attain However, a mutual friend of both returns after in love with the wife, and: the hus- 1 who have been enjoying an automo- band, to promote selfish, financial } : aa eee eeeoasaget’ the. to: | ie HHP because of Hlnoss. mance. This situation culminates in a very powerful climax in Mexico where, after a’ thrilling fight with bandits the husband is killed and the | Born to One but Given Away| | of four-year-old June Haskett since jtoday refused to order four-year-old | Shanholtzer- later, married Rudolph Just what form “Her Husband’s | first husband died he named little Trademark” takes will be divulged! June as an heir to his estate, be- TWO SISTERS FIGHTING FOR SAME CHILD to Shield the Reputation of Mother NOW HEIR TO ESTATE Unique Legal Tangle Involves Several Families in Duluth Courts Duluth, Minn., Aug. 16.—The final episode in a legs? battle waged be tween two sisters over the custody the child’s birth, was enacted in dis- trict court here today when Mrs. Lois Hollan of Los Angeles, through a writ of habeas corpus forced Mrs. | \Esie Shostead of Duluth, to appedr in court. A story of conflicting mother loves, martial difficulties, death threats and a country-wide search for June Haskett, alleged heir to the oil properties of the late D. A. Shanholtzer, reputed wealthy oil promoter was unfolded in district court here today by witnesses in a case whereby the mother of an il- legitimate, since married, is asking the court to forte her sister to re- linquish custody of the child. Judge W, T. Cant in district court June Hackett returned to her mother, Mrs. Lois Pollan of Savannah, Ga.,| declaring that in ais mind Mrs. Elsie Shostead of Duluth, a sister, who adopted the child soon after birth, was entitled to its custody. ' However, the court granted a motion for a new trial, > : The question at issue apparently will be: Cin a person retain custody of an illegitimate child after a ing the child as her own from a sister when adoption papers never were signed. Attorneys. believed legal entangle- | ments gver an estate may develop | with the disposition of the ease be-| cause of the misrepresentation of the child’s parentage to the father-in-law of Mrs, Shostead. Hearing of the case in the local] court makes the termination of a na tion-wide search which the child's! mother claims to have made for the} Shosteads. | Little June was. born on May 20, 1918, to Mrs. Hollan, who was ther Miss Lois Haskett. Elsie, the sister, who was then Mrs. Shanholtzer, agreed with Lois to, call the child her | own and represented the girl as such to relatives, the petition for the habeas corpus writ relates. Mrs. | Shanholtzer’s husband died a few months after the child was born, Mrs. Shostead. When Se father of Elsie’s lieving the child to be his grand- Meanwhile, soot. after the mother she married Clayton R, Pollan. Lois | then demanded custody of June, claiming that such was the agree-| ment. Mr. Pollan apcared alone in court He state! to the cc/irt the child’s mother was unable to make ONE OF FIRST | WHITE SETTLERS | pearing in The Tribune today, gives the names of those lawyers said to |WILTON MINES had allowed Elsie to take the child, |: AVAHLULAAALTUNARGUETETHUOALTAOA EAA HETERO BAR BOARD 10. BAR LAWYERS Thirty-two Who Haven't Paid License Can’t Practice, Board Says ‘ FORUM ENJOINED Fargo, N. D. Ang. 16.—Au- thority of the state board of bar examiners to attempt disbarment of attorneys who have refused to pay the, $15 license fee required by state law was brought into i today by C. L. Dawson, Fargo attorney, who obtained a: temporary injunction restrain- ing the Fargo Forum from pub- lishing a legal notice barring them from practice. Judge a. T. Cole, Cass county district court signed the order returnable Au- gust 21. 4 When the state board on June 6, adopted a resolution to take this action of disbarment, Tay- lor Crum, Fargo attorney in a letter to the attorney general took the position that: the board was attempting to collect the fee‘by threat and without “pre- ~ tense of instituting legal pro- ceedings.” , Official advertisements stating that 32 lawyers of North Dakota are prohibited from practicing law because they have failed to pay the $15 annual license fee were dispatch- ; ed for newspaper publications today: by the State Bar Board. It is the} first general action taken» by _ the. board unde the “head tax” placed, upon lawyers of the state by the legislature. In addition to the: advertisement the board dispatched about 200 let- ters to clerks of court and judges stating the lawyers named were not} permitted. to practice. The action, it is'stated, follows a campaign by the board to collect all delinquent fees. There are about 500 lawyers who have paid the $15 license fee for the current year, it is stated. | The board’s advertisement, ap-, be delinquent. GETTING CARS Wilton, N. D., Aug. 16.—Cars were being shunted to the Washburn Lig- nite Coal Company’s mines today preparatory to expected reopening tomorrow as a result of the settle- ment of the soft coal strike. CHARGED WITH ASSAULT (ity the Associated Preasy Fargo, N. D., Aug. 10.—John Burns was arrested here charged with begging and with assault and! battery after Julius Witcik charged that the former had knocked, him down after, Witcik * had refused: to give him a quarter to huy a meal. n WZ eee Here’s the System Keep good health and UNTTUT ATT T VETERAN DIES MONTH 7 AFTER NECK IS BROKEN THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PAGE FIVE ! You Mus See These Furs to Appreciate Them SELECT YOURS NOW ‘. LITTLE BLOCK died aot a local hospital. from the fifth git. down. The injury had resulted in paralysis of his body An X-ray ~ HOENCK’S Fur Store ‘Will Sell Their High-Grade Garments " The Regular Guarantee of the Hoenck’s Fur Store Goes With Every Garment FRIDAY AND SATURDAY “WILL BE GIVEN OFF THE REGULAR PRICE ional Harvester ime of the accident. LT UNHOUUEVNEUATUA HUTA i st FUR SALE AT THE : ~ Rose Sho Little Block ‘ AUG. 18th and 19th of Fargo, N. D. at a Discount of Mother love is very strongly veloped among apes. company at the TVMHQVOUAQUORTUOONTUESEREOENEQAEAEAOLOOAEAEUNTAOUOUEAEERLUHOOROEOEOEOGOOONEUUOOONEUOOERRUOOOORUGOEENOUGEOONEUOOORUOUOOOUUHOGER}UOEOOO TELL a ICTESHI AN -AUUUUUTEOUOAUQOUATTAOELOOHASOEGHOOOOOOOUEUGEOUOOEEEUAUGESOOUAUOUEEUESSOUU de- success at your elbow. ‘Keep an eye on your eyes for good work in the office and in the open. Shelltex Shur-on glasses have made good eyesight popular. They photograph revealed that a fractured vertebraé was causing pressure ot the spinal cord. An operation was performed and the pressure removed, but he failed to tally. -He was single and was employed, by the Interna- Minot, N. D., Aug. 16.—Peter.)J. Faas, 26, World War veteran, son of Mr, and Mrs. Bert Faas, of Minot, whose live hovered in the bglance for a month as the result of. a broken neck, received in an auto accident, jtwo lovers find the triumphs of their righteous unselfish love. Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Johnson| Stuart Holmes plays the husband and Mr. and Mrs. Aartwell Johnson} with all his old-time villainous, of Dickinson, motored to Bismarck! suave finesse. Richard Wayne is x, yesterday, for a visit with Mr. and| Jeading man in the role of the friend vrs, Frank Register. Mrs. Richard\and the other characterizations are PASSES AWAY i ‘Valley City; », Aug. 16-— Hans Jensen Flatner, better known to Barnes county people as Hans Johnson, one of, tha pioneers of the county and the first white settler in MOTOR TO CITY. Vi. Johnson was formerly Miss Mae Poole of this cit FROM. PORTLAND. Mrs. Ira W, Griffin and son, Har- day for a visit with their daughter, Irene Griffin, Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Griffin and Mr, and Mrs, H. W.. Rich holt. 4 { RETURNS FROM VACATION. Miss Blanche Doorley, chief clerk in the office of thé secretary of state, who has been on a two weeks’ vaca- tion in St. Paul, and White Bear Lake, Minn., has returned to the city. WOMAN'S BENEFIT ASSOCIATION The Woman's Benefit Association will hold a special meeting Friday evening at~8 o'clock at the K. P. » hall. All members are urged to be }'resent. RETURN FROM TRIP Dr. and Mrs. W. E: Cole who have sota and other points east have re- turned to their home. RETURN FROM WEDDING TRIP. Mr, and Mrs. Lewis Warren, who have been on a wedding trip to De- troit Lake, Minn. have returned to the city. I jars. Margaret Froats of Grand Forks, who has been attending the meeting of the Children’s Code Com- mission here left this morning for her home. TO VALLEY CITY. Miss Margaret Meyers left yester- low of Portland, Ore. arrived yester-, been on a vacation trip to Minne-| efliacted by Eucien Littlefield, Clar- ence Burton, Charles. Ogle and maker of. the Sewell Ford stories appears in “Torchy’s Holdup” and the interesting Movie Chats furnish further variety to the program. CAPITOL William Fox is presenting Shirley Mason in another of those dainty, powerfully appealing roles with which this star has become so close- ly identified under his management. ThYs time the photoplay is “Very Truly Yours” and it is due to open tenight at the Capitol theater. No, Miss Mason will not appear as & for- Jorn and patietic figrue (in which she so often has gripped our hearts); but her character as a charming young hotel stenographer alone in the world, and the sequel of her ma- trimcnial venture, are likely to en- lise keenest sympathy just the same, The story, written by Helen Hawk- ‘ins, is cleverly developed along lines ‘ that embrace both light comedy and serious moments. The direction of the picture was Edythe Chapman. Torchy the fun- | Hobart township’ ‘died yesterday. Death was due to ‘old age, the’ de- ceased being eighty-one years of age at the time of his death. } Hans Jensen Flatner. was born at, Nannestad, Norway, in 1841. He came to the United States in 1872, settling in Minnesota where he work- ed until 1878, at which time he, came to North Dakota, taking up a homc- stead in what:is:now-known as Ho- batt township. He lived on the farm until a few years ago when he retired and moved to the city. i = | SENTENCED FOR YEAR (By the Associated Press) Fargo, N. D., Aug. 16.—James Mar- tin, one of three alleged robbers cap- tured near Tower City the night of August 10, when Cass county deputy sheriffs said they were trying to re- move loot from a cache, was sen- tenced to a year in the county jail by Judge A. T. Cole in district county court this morning, charged with carrying concealed weapons. L Better baking, better bread | | —“Never Fails” Flour. in thy, hands of Harry Beaumont, |who ‘Slso directed. “Miss Mason's recent successful photoplay. “The Ragged Heiress.” THE WOMAN OF POISE, Once a rarity, is now to be obser- ved and admired upon every’ hand. Indeed, no other woman can flour- ish long in the midst of this mod- ern, complicated life. In the home, in business, in social life, the wo- man who is serene and confident wins, while the nervous, flustered individual wastes her talénts and gets nowhere. Of course, poise is meet every optical need and | individual _ taste. Visit our optical spe- cialist regularly. BONHAM BROS. Optometrists BISMARCK Duin MMM (4 Keep An Eye OnYour Eyes EMMI Palace yt" Tonight Feature Extraordinary “ONE CLEAR CALL” 6 Weeks in Minneapolis |, | z | ; : | / | Autoists, Drive Over and See This Feature ; Friday “Two Kinds of Women” With Pauline Frederick | — i Physics, St: Joh Aug. 16, 17, 18 Conducted by Fr. Hillory, Professor of ns. Univ., Collegeville, Minn. Auditorium St. Marys School Bismarck, N. D. Morning classes for those who are plan- ning to build their own sets. Lectures and Entertainments 8:00 P. M. Tickets for Entire Course $1.00 Single Lectures, Admission 50c Auspices Knights of Columbus WEBB BROTHERS ntertainment and Exhibit | Radio School | Lectures, E: OTH TAUT OAT LT TE 4. Weeks in Chicago | EMM TAM NA Hf [BUSINESS DIRECTORY | READ THIS STORY OF. ALEX McKENZIE The first complete account of the strange private «life of North Dakota’s former political dictator. It Will Help to Explain THE MYSTERY OF HIS ~ SECRET FAMILY How he maintained a household for years.in New York state, unknown to his closest friends. How the message announcing his wife’s death was delayed thirty days, — reaching him only two days before his own death. How he went to his grave keeping his strange secret, which was revealed in his will. ~ FACTS AND PHOTOGRAPHS HITHERTO UNPUBLISHED will be included in this big, exclusive story to be published Next Sunday, August 20 for Valley Gity, where she will Sependent mainly upon sound health | visit with her parents for a week. | 314 steady nerves. If you feel that | Undertakers Embalmers Funeral Director: ; Pollard Comedy in the = you are being kept back in this way, | Pathe Review || Licensed Embalmer in Charge STREET DANCE. |. | why not turn to that great woman’s | Tabhe Review || DAY PHONE 246 \ NIGHT PHONES 246-887 The Bismarck boys’ band will give a street dance Friday night on the reemdy, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound, which was manu- a thorough under- Saturday MINNEAPOLIS TRIBUNE a GL comer of Fourth and Broadway. | factured. from \ . VISITING BROTHER | suinding of ihe nervone yet ot Matinee-Night PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS William Finney, of Sioux Fal ee sigma a apne pee 5, eo re Licensed Embalmer in hata ar Ia, is visiting with his brother, Burt fi n \ i n bh = — = a. is visiting with his folders of Ferry Coupon Conn ee Nee neat | DN Eom ight Pone 100 or Finney and family. TEACHERS TAKE EXAMS Teachers examinations for profes- sional certificates are. being held ] this week! at the capitol, Dickinson, Minot, Valley City, and Grand Forks. About thirty men and women Books of the Red Trail Ferry |Co. may have them redeemed at par by mailing them to .R. B. O’Rourke, Mandan, No.’ before September 8 Dak., 11922, MATINEES WED-SAT. | 3 P. M. Mountain Time || | BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY 220 MAIN STREET Upholstered Furniture Made to Order. ORDER A COPY NOW FROM YOUR NEWSDEALER