Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE TWO SUFFERING OF | MONTHS ENDED BY DROWNING Mrs. R. C. Robinson mer To Take Her Own Life | By Long Illness | Intense suffering from illness | her an invalid for more i which | than a year ang a half is given by | authorities and relatives as the | cause for the tragic death of Mrs. | Eva Robinson, wife of R. C. Robin- | son, Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Robinson dropped from the new North Dakota Liberty Memo- rial bridge into the rushing current of the Missouri river 60 feet below, ing was drowned. Her body was not ecovered. | Mrs, Robinson, who had gained a ost of friends during her residence | 1 Bismarck, became seriously ill at | / rst from spinal trouble, from which 1e improved, but this led to other | me diseases which kept her bed-rid- n most of the time, and frequently » used intense suffering. During any months she bore herself brave- in her illness, but ii believed at the continual pain and hope- ssness of recovery led her to take r own life, Frequently she was taken for rides | un automobile by her husband, ho is employed at the French and elch Hardware company, and Sun- | ay afternoon a ride was arranged vr her. She left the McKenzie ho- tel, where they lived, with Mr. Rob- son and her daughter, in a taxicab. they drove first to the swimming ol, where she left her daughter, d then she asked to return to the el. Reaching the hotel she asked :, Robinson to go to her room with 1. When he had entereg the vator she tolq the driver, George } nd, to go to the bridge. é Helped From’ Car. Arriving at a point just beyond he third pier of the bridge she said | e wished to take some pictures. | he was aided in getting out of the r by Bond, and stood at the rail- | g. She then asked him to go down | 1 the west bank and pick some wil- w slips which she saw there. He tarted, and when he was 50 to 75 vet away he turned. She had slip- -d over the railing and hung there or an instant, ang then dropped. The water into which she fell is bout 20 feet deep and the current is bout nine miles an hear. The Mis- ouri is high now, and the swirling aters quickly sucked the body un- er. She was seen to rise once and hen disappear under the bridge. Later it was learned there were no ilms in the camera she carried. Mrs, Robinson was born in Eld- ridge, near Jamestown, but spent most of her younger days in Mil- waukee, Wis. Her mother, Mrs. E. L, Griffings, and a brother, T. S. Gr fings, attorney for the U. S. Naturali- zution Bureau, live in St. Paul, Her husband and one daughter, Muriel, also survive, There were rumors that Mrs, Rob- ingon hag fallen in the river on the feast side, and many people were at the bridge late last evening. The river also was dragged around the east pier. Drag the River. The point where the tragedy hap- pened is on the Morton county side of the river. Through the excite- ment of the tragedy, the offices of Sheriff Hedstrom and Coroner Gobel, were not notified, they learning of the tragedy some hours after it hap- pened. Coroner Gobel, George Dohn, J. P, French and George Bohn wete at the bridge last evening to make a survey. In view of the fact that the river is higher than normal, and there is a swift current and undertow, it was expected that the body ould be car- ried at least to a sandbar below the bridge. Authorities were dragging the river this morning. Coroner Kenelley of Mandan was notifieg and offered co-operation. The banks of the river also were being patrolled. Mrs, Robinson was a member of the Daughters of the American Rev- solution. It was planned to send out the ferry boat under Capt. Leach this afternoon to drag the river if the wnid receded. NOMCE: OF MORTGAGE ALE BY ADVERTISEMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, ape that certain Mortgage, executed and delivered by Cressie E. Marble, a Wright Mortgagee dated the 20th day of November A. D. nineteen hun- dred and 17 and filed for record in -the-office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh, and State of ANorth Dakota, on oe ‘Slat day of De- ‘amber, A. D. 7, and recorded in Book 144 of Mesetgaee , at page 476, “Will be foreclosed by a of the ‘Premises in such Mortgage ‘and here- Snafter described, at the front door Ea the Court House in the city of ismarck, in the County of Bas 4 State of North Dakota, at r of 2:00 o'clock P. on the rd day of July 1923, to satisfy the Pppoant ae due eres said Mortgage on day of sale. > The premi described in sald lortgage and which will be sold te isfy the same, are those certain mises situated in the County ‘of leigh, and State of North ‘Deko- lescribed as follows, to-wit Southwest Quarter of Section irty-two (32) in Townshi dred pry four, Haas THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE “Come Over Into Macedonia And Help Us,’’ Echo of Age-Old Cry, H ay 4y Answered by American ‘Red Cross The old ery, “Come, ovér into. Mare: donia and help us,” voiced in the days of St. Paul, had an echo last ear when refugees from Eastern Thrace poured across the Macedonian border, helpless, homeless, sick and facing death from cold and hunger. That the cry was not unheeded these pictures, of barges laden with bales of blankets bound Macedoniaward. from the Piraeus and this typical er he’ hugging the precious can f milk, a gift of the American Red Cross, clearly testify. What they can not show, however, is the magnitude of the American effort and the highly beneficient re- sults attained by the Red Cross workers in meeting the emergency not only in Macedonia but in the whole Grecian peninsula and the dozens of scattered islands of the Aegean and Ionian seas. easured in cash merely, the cost of America’s contribution through its national organization for dis- aster and emergency relief, the American Red Cross, was $2,600,000. With that sum half a million refu- gees were fed, not occasionally, but day in and day out for months, hos- pitals were opened, equipped, and supervised by American doctors and American nurses, blankets were dis- tributed, and clothing, milk for the babies born in the turmoil of the great hegira and for their mothers, weakened by the hardships of their enforced wanderings. It is hard to estimate what this help meant to Greece. One can only cite examples here and there, taking the word of the Greeks themselves. “On the day before the arrival of the first Red Cross shipments of food Products ten refugees died from starvation here. Without the Ameri- can aid this situation would have continued. Since the arrival of the first American Red Cross products there have been no deaths from star- vation.” (In this case “here” is the city of Aigion where there were only fed but ¢lothed, for the report continues:) “Before the distribu- tion of American Red Cross blankets many refugees were lying on the cold, bare, dirt floors of buildings in which G7 had been quartered. As a result there was much pneumonia and rheumatism. The American Red Cross was able to supply enough blankets to every one of these ground-sleepers to afford them suffi- cient covering and the illness due to colds decreased rapidly.” From other towns come reports of typhus and smallpox threatening to become epidemic but checked. by prompt disinfection of refugees and yy extensive vaccination campaigns, of sanitary measdres enforced, of infant welfare stations opened, of American health ideals inculcated in people whose lack of knowledge of the simplest pHineiples of hygiene tendered their very presence @ a-odly menace to the cities in which vey had crowded themselves. From the very day of the destruc: tion of Sear last September the American Red Cross has worked un- ceasingly in combatting the effects of the wave of a million refu, which swept over Greece, as an after- math of that disaster and the ca- tastrophic defeat of Greek arms, It met the emergency as an emergency. It does not. propose that those it has aided should be pauperized and: be- come a permanent burden upon American charity. Therefore, its emergency relief program will be brought to a close on June 80. By that time the gardens of Greece will be yielding their. increase, the har- vest will be,ripe for the sickle and another chapter in the history of HAD NO REST NIGHT OR DAY Miss Snider Praises Tanlac For Entirely Restoring Health—Gains 8 Lbs. . “When I get started telling gany- one about Tanlac I yet so enthdsed |I hardly know when to stop, for this remarkable medicine has done me so much good I could praise it the live-long day,” declared Miss Margaret Snider, popular girl of 5527 S. Wabash St., Chicago. + “I passed through a year of mis- ery ‘with stomach trouble and was in a terribly run-down condition. My appetite left me and I was eat- ing scarcely enough to keep up my | strength. I had splitting headaches, my sleep was so disturbed and my nerves in such an excited state that every: morning found me as tired! and worn-out as when I went to bed. “The Tanlac treatment is certain j ly -wonderful. I have now takenj four bottles and it has given me a} keen appetite, my food agrees with me atd I have gained eight pounds. All my other troubles are gone. too, and as for my recommending| Tanlac, that goes without saying.” Tanlac is for sale by all good druggists. ‘Accept no substitute. Over 37-million bottles sold. Tanlac Vegetable Pills are Na- ture’s own remedy for constipation. For sale everywhere. —— ships attending a barnstorming theatrical troupe, as well’ as the ac- tivities of a studio in full . opera- tion. “The World's A Stage” is acted by an allstar cast headed by Dorothy Phillips, whose talent, en- ables her to make the role vibrant ‘ | with emotion, Kenneth Harlan and Bruce McRae re\der fine support. BAND INSTRUMENTS WANTED The Bismarck - City Band under auspices of Association of Commerce wants band in- struments. Those having same for sale please com-! municate with L. C. Sorlein,| Association of Commerce, | Bismarck, N. D. NOTICE! All drinking water should! Dr. C. E. Stackhouse, City Health Officer.i The oye BISMARCK 8,500 refugees being fed, and not ' AT THE MOVIES | i THE ELTINGE. In Ceci} B. De Milles new Para- mount production, “Adam's Rib,” the Chicago Boarg of Trade with its wheat and corn pits, 1s reproduced with absolute fidelity to make real the scenes where Milton Sills, one of | ar the five featured players in the pic- ture, wins and loses a fortune in grain trading. Scores of trained brokers are used in these scenes to give a realistic touch to the excited action in the pits. Then there is the Natural History Museum where Elliott Dexter and Pauline Garon start a pleasing love romance. Great, towering, thirty- foot dinosaur skeletons put this scene in a class by jtself as a novel- ty. Cloely related to thts pre-historic display is the expected and f n- ed De Mille “cut-back” or “vision” scene in which the life of a man of the time of the stone uge is depicted. A huge redwood forest, the largest indaor set ever built for a motion picture, forms the background for the dramatic action, Seen in cave- day costumts of furs and thongs, liot Dexter, Milton Sills, Anna Q. Nilsson, Pauline Gaeon and Julia Faye, the featured players. Equally colorfuj but in the mod- ern sequence are scenes, showing gorgeous ball at the Ramsay home, a particular feature of which is the color photography which gi beautiful effect jin the fla hing of huge Japanese lanterns carried by the dancers. Besides the featured players in “Adam's Rib” which opens at the Eltinge theater Tuesday for a three days showing, the excellent De Mille vast includes Clarence Geldart, George Field, Robert Brower, Forrest Robinson, Geno Corrado, Wedgewood Nowell and Clarence Burton. CAPITOL All of us who constitute the great sereen public have often wondered what takes place when the big stu- dios are closed for the day and what becomes of the stars. It is the popular impression that the ma- jority of them are basking in the spotlight of public. favor—dancing, ate. ‘This is a wrong conclusion, de- clares Elinor Glyn, whose latest story, written especially for the een, “The World’s A Stage,” will the feature attraction at the pitol Theatre toni “The ma- jority of sereen players live as or- derly lives as the hidebound dwell- ers in-some scrupulously religious WHAT THE WORLD IS DOING BY POPULAR MECHANICS AS SEEN X-Raying Heart Action of School Children Impressed by the ‘fact that 50 to 70 per cent of school children are to some extent physically defective—a portion having curvature of the spine or other less obvious deformities, while fully two per cent suffer from diseases of the beart—physicians of Minneapolis have introduced a new system of physical examination. Chief among the new devices for this purpose is an X-ray eamera for taking pictures of a child’s heart while he is engaged in pedaling a stationary bicycle. By means of a metal framework the body of ‘the child is made to support the picture-taking apparatus, s0 ar- Tanged that the box containing the X- ‘tube hangs on his back, whereas film holder is suspended in front thé heart region. » The child is then direeted to “ride” the bicycle as fast ar] and hard as he can, and the picture of | ,, the heart is taken while he is in action. | ; reg in size and shape, which help to the story of health or disease, are thus easily recorded. The bicycle is also used to measure the child’s ins renty- aye Pitch Pi Principal Meridian. ‘ i, Mortgagee. has paid certain ‘gums to-wit: Taxes for the year with interest thereon haat ‘of sale, bd dd to gs which ‘amotnt ent ‘exercise on | hundred cars Monster Locomotive Pivots on Front Truck h > eehelpers” aa enero named of which, in a failroader’s, language, means two locomotives at the frant end of a train, and the last two designating the loco- motiwescoupled on the rear end, to move. trains up steép grades—probably will become only memories, if-monster eee one illustrated are to be gener: When this big Mallet-type locomo- tive takes'a curve in the track, it’can- not make the turn as its smaller brothers do, as it is 108 feet long—one of the largest ever built. . Its boilers swing on pivots inde tly of the wheels. It has. 12 .driving wheels, weighs 850,000 pounds — 425 tons —| “ and carries 12,000 gallons of water and ns of Spl. Its. use. has gallo: ‘ | largely been confined to freight ‘on g western road, and it easily han ae the Rocky Mountains. MAGAZINE A Gauge for Clipping Hedges A little time spent in making the* hedge-clipping gauge shown in the drawing will go far to improve the appearance of hedge fene2s by making it pos- } sible to ‘clip the hedge uni- forthly, The perpen- dicular member of the gauge is made froma piece of 2 by 4-. in, material, but the horizontal ® parts may be of lighter stuff, the dimen- sions to which such a gauge is made de- pending upon in idual requirements. In use, the trimming is begun at one end of the hedge, the gauge being held in an upright position by standing upon the bottom member. Clip as much of the hedge as projects above the top of the gauge. pede . Keeping Out the Rain The. drawing shows:@ good method of keeping rain out of the open window of & sleeping’room, where it is essen- tial to have freah ‘air at‘all tiffies, ‘even during Tainy weather. A wooden box is made tofit between the window jambs American philanthropy 23) epd. community,” says the famous thor of “Three Weeks.” Mrs. Glyn is returning to Eng- land thoroughly convinced of -the clean living standards of the Amer- ican sereen players. The spectator is taken into the home of the star. There he sees that she is an every day human being. The spectator au- also catches a glimpse of the hard- “Foghorn” Clancy came east the other day to partici- tional capital. pate in his dad’s rodeo at the na- Someone asked the “cowlad” how he managed to tote the valise and saddle. replied Clancy Jr., showing his arm. be boiled until further notice.! FoR RENT—3 room apartment not jemarck College) (The MONDAY, JUNE 18, 1928 A GENUINE COW “BOY” \ (shown here) “Here's how,” Too Jate To Classify ; {FOR RENT—Room in modern home]: close “in. Gentlemen _ preferred. 419, 7th St. Phone 644W. 6-18-1w FOR SALE—Airdale pups. Pedigreed DAILY PHOTO stock. Dam’s register No, 303310.]} 2 BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA & Bs ee Ni, 365956. A. Fal || Known all over the Northwest for Quality ‘arley, 46 Broadway. 6-18-1wi ® MA ns FOR SALE-—Electric/ washing —ma- Ib US YOUR FILMS © chine, wardrobe, china closet, sew- ing machine, piano und other household goods and some garden tools. Phone 766R. 819 First St. TYPEWRITERS 6-18-3t | Board and Room, also extra meals. anes “The Mohawk”, 401 5th street. minister ; ; s 6-18-1wk. Tybgwrter thoroughly modern but cheap. Cull Bismarck, 762 between 5 and 6 o'clock. o. 6-18-3t. cA NATIONAL f), é and The Sayama lotheg Roberts and Second Street North, Fargo, N. Dak. Consolidated, will hereafter be under the same management and students enrolling at one of these Colleges may change to the other without loss of time, change of text-books or additional tuition charges. Both Colleges in session thruout the year. Enroll for our Summer Courses, and we will send you to a good business or banking position immediately upon graduation. For free catalog and particulars write—G. M. LANGUM, Pres., Bismarck, N. Dak. — Hh, SS a ———————_ jn place by i | Three Kinds of Products Advertising Can Sell First, the eannuas that offers some new aA better way, of meeting human wants. For such a product ad- vertising offers the cheapest, quickest means of finding those people who will appreciate the advantages the new product ‘offers. Ate ‘ Second, the product with hidden values that escapes the-consumer’s.untrained eye. For such a product ad- vi rtising can educate the buyer until he becomes a dis- criminating purchaser. 7. Siva, the product ahi —in lucid moments — its owner will admit is no better than others of its kind. For such a product advertising can create a personality 4g that, will make it, stand out from competing products = like’ ‘the one lighted house in a row of dark ones. “Which kind of product is yours? Have you learned to uge advertising to fit its needs? Published by the’ Bismarck Daily Tribune in co-operation with The American Association of Advertising Agencies. = N ‘ | | means of thumbscrews on the gides, and ‘also by the weight of the window.on top. Theo} ismade on the ssiutend: 80 thatrain cannotenter,