The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 20, 1923, Page 3

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' i ‘ pas t. wy \ And “Our Gang” Capitol Theatre OFFERS TONIGHT (SATURDAY) BUCK JONES in—— Hole” | | in “Back Stage.” ee ‘at Regular Admission COMING MONDAY AND TUESDAY Children 10c. 4 “St Elmo” ‘with Badbara La Marr—Bessie Love — John Gilbert From the world famous novel by Augusta Evans Prices of 30c Adults. OF SIGNS ON. ROADS URGED Too Many Confusing, Destroy Beauty of Highways and Values of Official Signs CLUB TO ACT AUTO Branding unnecessary danger signs and “stop” signals used for adver tising purposes along public high- ways.as being dangerous, many au- tomobile clubs affiliated with the American Automobile —associatgon Highway departments are campaign- ing with the co-operation of the State for their removal. In some of the Eastern where the traffic on main highways is heavy, instances are reported where automobile flash “stop—rail- road crossing” signs have been put up by National advertisers 30@ feet in advance of a spur track crossing the highway where the tracks are used once or twice a month, just because the location was ideal from an advertisting standpoint. On the same highways where these signs were needed, they were often found missing. In New Jersey at a wide place in the road,.a cut-out painted figure representing a traffic officer and semaphore on the arms of which are painted the words “stop” with the name of the tea house under- neath, blocks tyaffic. The figure of the traffic officér is so realistic un- der the glare of ‘headlights that motorists who are not acquainted with the deception will instinctively obey the semaphore, . states WEDNESDAY—THURSDAY AND FRIDAY we are proud to present “STRANGERS OF THE NIGHT” ie Captain Apple Jack department has requested the Motor Vehicle department to have removed “stop” signs placed by property own- ers in advance of private roads lead- ing from the homes to the main highway, maintaining that it is the duty of these owngrs to stop before driving onto the main highway. +The danger of the use of warn- ing signs or stop signals on the high- ys where they are* not required ¢ the motorists who has been “fooled” by unnecessary signs care- less when he approaches a warning ignals which is properly placed for his protection, points out the Tour- inf Transportation Bureau ‘of the A.A. A. It is the purpose of the A. A. A, clibs to check up on the use of warning signals on the high- ways in their territory and take such steps as may be necessary to have. misleading signs removed. The "Weather | pats a noon today. Temperature at 7 a, m. 30. Temperature at noon 45. Highest yesterday 44. Lowest yesterday 40. Lowest last night 26. Precipitation 0. - Highest wind velocity 12. Weather Forecast Por Bosmarck and vicinity: ing temperature Sunday. For North Dakota: tonight ,and Sunday. ature Sunday and north portion to night. Weather Conditions western Great Pacific morning from the Lakes region é the’ Some light s! Rocky Mountain slope. gion. Temperatures are slope of the Rockies. In Connecticut the<State Highway f youve been “some electrical s! those, to be Things + last three‘weeks to stop in at 100-watt bulb for the bowl, one of for use with the. toaster that is so convenient .on the breakfast table and one or two. other little things\that you happen Just drop in-at Skeels, tomorrow and get’ thut ’ off your mind! : intending for the sie: hop and get a new two-way sockets needing. : ROOSEVELT | ‘CRADLE APPEARS. si ©) cuide, hunted i For twenty-four howts ending at Gen-{afteFnoon to work with a lerally fair tonight and- Sunday. Ris-| committee of the North Dakota Farm Generally fair| Rising temper- The high pressure #fea is: ¢enter- ed over the Plains States and gener- ally fair, cool weather prevails this coast. fowers occurred during the past 24 hours along the eastern | ~ It is snow- ing oyer the upper Great Lakes re- lower this morning along the eastern Orris H. Roberts, Meteorologist. by HOME FILLED. WITH TOKENS Many of ‘Articles Used by Ted- dy During His Life Time | - Seht To Fill House | New York, Oct. 20.—A huge stuff- ; ed lion, bagged, in one of his, hunt- ing expeditions, a frying pan, a car-| toon by ‘Tom Nast, are only three diversified zrticles of the hundreds toes of all sorts which have gravi ed to Roosevelt House, the resto of Theodore Roosevelt at 20th Street, Manhattan. to be dedicated Octo The house i ber 27. ‘A set of scrapbooks giving the) career of Mr. Roosevelt, as told from ; day to day in the press, is\one of | the notable additions ‘to be received | by the Roosevelt Association during tue iast year, ‘this set of books was | started by the President's father,! colitinued by himself, and concluded by members of his family. In it ate) some passages in Roosevelt's own handwriting, as well as a number of | letters he wrote while at Harvard. | Supplementing the original cartoon | of Theodore Roosevelt drawn by; ‘Nast for Harper’s Weekly in 1882! nd later #resented by the famous} exposer of the “Tweed Ring” to ‘the | President, are many other cartoons | from foreign and American pens {graphically recording Roosevelt's | colorful career. | Dwight Franklin’s miniature plas- | tic group of Roosevelt, his son Ker-| |mit, and gun bearers hunting in| South Africa is a unique addition to} the collection. The figures in this) i eee stage. The group is strikingly ren-| oppos ~ RESTRICTION listic. jot cretary of the Navy cradle. The message, a letter to | Richard M. Hurd, was donated by its | recipient. Six hundred bound volumes of| \back numbers of the New York Her-| ald, Times and World covering an jimportant stage of Mr. Roosevelt's life, were presented by Krank A. Munsey, publisher of the Htrald. A jcostly riding outfit, the gift of the] Brazilian government at the time of | the Brazilian’ government at thei jtime of the Colonel’s River of Doubt ‘expedition is there. And reposing with manuscripts of {articles which appeared in the Out- Jook is the frying pan the man with the “Big Stick” used 40 years ago when he and W. W. (Bill) Sewall, Maing | Fargo Business Men Back Co-Op Sales Endeavor Fargo, Oct. 20.—Within an hour efter a committee of Fargo business men had been appointed at a meet- ing at the commercial club yesterday similar bureau federation: on plans for a po- ‘0 cooperative marketing~organiza- ion for North Dakota business men | of the city subscribed $2,500 toward a -prospective state fund of $7,500 with which the work of organization is to, financed, E, J. Weiser, president of the First National bank; H. B. Fuller, secre- it somewhat ween ene * =. Suction Cup Heide Rater group are six inches high and have} Vt jcial e s WF PAC sa iia THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE 0s ipa IN ELECTION. | PAY PREMIUM 8 ij “ON SPUDS OF Park H. (above), been colored and set in a miniature) président, is a Democrat, the Pollard of Cavendish,! careful in practicing seed treatment the!and selection, and they have been He will! further aided in disease control by spe-| the fact that the country is new and | first executive's reau federation; Baker Insurance company, were de gated py the committee to cooperate with other North cated in potato growing ‘centers pians for raising the and for planning a campaign In the state. WILL BUILD THREE HOUSES Nels Levin Adds to Bismarck Building Total For Year Nels Levin has hou: They are to be At the cor- Then the princess, who had mar- ner of Avenue D and Fourth street,|ried a surveyor named Nikitina of modern bungalow type. The foun- | wher she was 16, lost her two chil- dation h been laid and work is’ to |dren. “Lack of food and medicine rushed fast as possible. tesulted in their deaths. It is understood work may be And when Henry C. Wolfe, recent- started yet this fall on one or two Bismarck, increas- other houses in ing the building total forthe year to 40 houses. to population Bismarck is building more houses this year than any othew city in the state, teports from varis| forgotten what cocoa tasted like, ous cities indicate. : to 35 cer SNES on hae, taser on cousiw of P. H. Dale (below) at lection Nov. 6 for the vacancy | The cradle in which one of the!in the U. S. Senate. Pollard is said outstanding figures of history was to be a wet, i rocked, and his last public message} by the Anti-Saloon League. also have been incorporated in thej close personal friend of Coolidge, is collection. Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt,| believed to stand a better chance } wife of the present Assistgnt ife-| than presented the | cou ile Dale is backed Dale, | own first Ae eee tary of the North Dakota Farm Bu- | and Julius Baker, Dakota ¢! tate rted construc- tion of three additional houses in Bismarck, to be completed yet this fall, to meet the demang for small In proportion - 5 Rolling Dice By Airplane Latest Of Sports “With giant dice made of light material, aviators now from their airplanes as one of the latest American sports., machine, the propeller is twirled, and the rush of airsends the-dice rolling down the field with the plane in pursuit. ‘The cubesate then placed in position seein. play the game of dice| Placed in front of the quota, That the World CAS SEEN BY POPULAR cMECHANICS ¢MAGAZINE M'KENZIE C0. | { i mand High Price, A. Cc. ik { i} | | i | High Quality Potatoes Com- | Extension Official Finds | Fargo, N. D., Oct. 20.—Prices of- ‘fered for potatoes this fall furnish \ another of the long procession of .il- ‘justrations ‘of the fact that farmers | | who produce a high quality product | ‘ean command a profitable price for) \fneir products, is the statement of ‘is, A. Willson of the North Dakota | ‘Extension division, who finds that | \farmers of McKenzie coulity are se- | it | for their potatoes, while prevailing | ‘prices over the state range from | 20 to 40 cents per bushel for the | average product. : | “MeKenzie county potato growers | | potatoes, which are true to type and liemarkably free_from disease,” Mr. | Willson declares. ‘Last year they j sent their county agent to Texas! ‘and Louisiana to open up a market | | for seed potatoes, and due to the! quality of the samples they submit- ted, they had little trouble in dis- | posing of all good seed stock at| prices which neeted them about ‘one |dollar per bushel. This year they |have built a warehouse at Arnegard and will store their potatoes there, | When’I was there a few days ago | the grocery stores were paying them | $1.25 per bushel for their potatoes, |and the growers declared that they | would not take any less, | “They have a fair crop, about equal | to the average for the state but the percentage of marketable tubers is ‘much higher than in most districts. | Many of the farmers have been very the soil is not full of diseases. The climage is also favorable to check disease development.” ‘RUSS NOBILITY ROUGHED IT Many Starved to Death Under, 1 Lenine and Trotzky Regime in| By NEA Service. tough sledding in these days of fam- | |curing a price of $1.25 per bushel || are producing high quality Triumph ||P Moscow, Oct. 20.—Even the prole- | tariat of old Russia has had mighty | |i TAUIAG IAT TAT TACT AE IAG TARTAR TETANUS WEBB BROTHERS | “Merchandise of Merit Only” Announce will be an “and Sale of _Albrecht.Furs— The Newer Fashions for the coming season, Wednesday, Oct. 24 are the only ones sold under the sealed. registration plan which fully protects the purchaser. their Annual ‘Exhibit ~ offered at very low prices ALBRECHT FURS You are cordially invited to come in d inspect this unusual display ine— But think of the surviving''rem- | ants of the nobility of Nicholas’ day. Under the regime of Lenin and Trotzky, they've suffered worse than death. pics Take Princess 'Gorchakova, for in- stance, Her mother was shot at the beginning of the Bolshevik revolu- tion in 1917, and her father, who had at dierent periods ruleq over the provinces of Kaluga and Viatka, was imprisoned. Kameneff had spared his life only because of a fayor Princess Gorchagova once had done for him. ly returneg to America from work with the American Relief Adminis- tration, saw her a year ago in the village of Melekes in the Smara province, the princess had not tasted white bread for four years. She had She and her husband were existing Is Doing tires. If the rims are perfectly plain at jeden ad ingeohtiaapee oy %-in. holes about 4 in. from the ends. ‘Two pins are riveted or welded to the efhd of the hinge and each end is then bent as shown. The pins are inserted into the holes drilled in the rim and the hinge is pushed down with the foot, thus spreading the rim. If there are Btuds on the rim, the hinge can be used without pins, by simply butting th | Governor Goodrich of Indnana con- [NUP SWAP a Yor Nive Nr NW Nm OP Nem Yr YR NR on a small allowance of black bread and dried fish, given in return for Nikitina’s services as a surveyor for the soviet. The Relief Administration couldn’t assist her because of her husband’s work for the Bolsheviki. But former tributed a special fund for the al- leviation of the sufferings of former intelligentsia. Wolfe, in Melekes, re- ceived 15 food packages. One was turneg over to the prince! ‘As long as she remains just plain Madam Nikitina, the princess’ safety from the hands of the soviet is as- sured. Let her revert to her royal tank and it will be a different story. WAREHOUSE Firemen Called Out at 2 a. m. o'clock this morning badly damaged the frame warehouse and ice house of Andrew Person on Broadway, be- tween Fourteenth and Fifteenth Sts. The warehouse was almost burned down and the roof was burned off the ice house. ‘The department was called a sec- ond time, about 6 o'clock, this fire being in the ice house. Firemen say they were unable to determine the origin\ of the fire. Mr. Person, who said he’ did not know of the fire until sometime after it happened, also said he was unable to determine the origin. The heavi- est loss, he said, was a new electric motor valued at $300. Odds and ends useq in construction work also were in the warehouse. ‘There was no insurance on the place, Mr. Person said, the insurance companies having cancelled the in- surance a couple of years ago. NOTICE AND CITATION, HEARING OF FIN. INT DIs- TRIBUTION OF ESTATE. 3 STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh.—ss. In County Court, Before Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge '.In the Matter of the Guardianship of Ida Schaper, Harry Schaper, ra ar Schaper, Otto Schaper, Sehaper, Minors F. 4 Pe- titioner, vs. Ida Schaper, Harry Schaper, Lily Schaper, Otto Schaper and Carl Schaper, Respondents. The State of North Dakota to the above named respondents You, the said Ida Schaper, Harry Lily Schaper, Otto Schaper and Schaper, are hereby notified that. the final account of F.R. Schaper the guardian of your estate, has been rendered to this Court, therein shov ing that your estate is ready for final settlement and distribution, and pe- HiNoning that bis necount, be allow: ed, the residue of said estate. be dis- ‘trib to the persons thereunto en- a titted, his administration closed and Bismarck, ' tricks #49 sree tne Gite at estate may appear and file ‘his ex- ceptions, in writing, to sald and petit: dents, and each of you, cited and required then and there to be and appear before this Court, and show cause, if any you have, why said account ‘should not be allowed, the residue of said estate distributed, the administr closed and charged. ( ved by publication four weeks in the .| Bismarck Tribune or service upon all of the respondent: FIRE BURNS i not less than ten d ry i hearin mn days before said event I. ©. DAVIES, in our town 5 room house, all modern but fur- To Fight Blaze * Fire’ which was discovered at 2/, FOR RENT—Warm basement garage FI with which the farming country sure AL Gea a AND or nine months, $40,000 worth of o sales reached $z¥,000, and eggs $5,000, while poultry amounting to $4,000 and more was sold. These figures do not inclfide shipments by private parties, amounting it is es- timated to fully $5,000 or more for the period. * count, ion and contest the same. And you, the above named respon- re hereby estate dis- Dated the 10th day of October, A 1923. ion of said id guardian be Beulah Lignite Coal is Best, $4.75 per ton. : Wachter Transfer Co. By the Court: 62. SEAL, I, C. DAVIES, Judge of the County Court Let the foregoing citation be ser- by persona: Judge of the County Court. 10-13-20-27—11-3 FOR SALE Read the Saturday Evening Post October 20 Page 68 nace, near new school, one block from paving. House in excellent condition. $8100.00, reasonable terms. room house, close in, very good condition, toilet, lights, water, ,Sewer, no furnace. $2800.00. Easy terms. CAPITAL LAUNDRY “The Friend of the Housewife.” in Riverview $5.00 per month. INSURANCE in reliable com- panies. My fire insurance busi- ness has doubled this year. There is a reason. F, E. YOUNG. 10-16-1w. ‘ Diversification Pays In Stutsman Co. Jamestown, Oct. 20.—The rapidity The study of fire fighting machinery is a problem. This fire insurance agency can pyt you in touch with aman i rounding Ypsilanti and southeastern Stutsman County, now are diversify- ing and ,the excellent resdlts being obtained are noted by Colonel Ben Gelbertson. Quoting authentic fig- ures he states that during the year 1928 from January 1,.to October 1, —who is waiting for a chance to help you, —whe can tell you bg r how geod your fire je ing equipment really is, —who will go over eli your | livestock was sold at Ypsilanti. In the live stock were included hogs. ELTINGE THEATRE TONIGHT — SATURDAY MABEL NORMAND “SUZANNA#&” PATHE .NEWS FIGHTING D . As a representative of the Hartford Fire Insw

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