The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 22, 1924, Page 2

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PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE INCREASE IN N. P. BUSINESS I$ EXPLAINED ivangelical Reformed Church auntie Mission and Charity Services every Sunday English Praygf meeting Wednes- Alw willing for in need Pastor, Asst n German 38 Years Busi- ; iy sven ar work for yads Has Ine Cent P.T. MAIER, During Past ness of Rail: 343° Per evening, creased TRINITY ENGLISH LUTHERAN CHURCH 1. G. Monson, Pastor. Sunday morn Truth.” In the “Who is the Holy Spirit? Sunday school and Bible Cla S. meets Monday es ROAD IS BUILDING for Topic any proof] Power of avening: instead of Sunday evening this Welcome to all LUTHERAN CHURCH \ Song Service will be held at the rst Lutheran church, Sunday even elght o'clock. A program con- of several choir selections, and instrumental solos and en, All are invited end this Song Service. ev, Alfson, President of the Bis- marck District is attending the an- FIRST = [Raises Family of 12, Gat Home n $150 Monthly ‘ELKS OFFER ESSAY PRIZES IN NO. DAKOTA ! Bistharck Lodge Announces Contest Is Open in Its Jurisdiction |RULES ARE EXPLAINED Two Contests, One For Moth. er’s Day and One For Flag Day, Are Reported | School pupils of North Dakota jseventh to twelfth grades inclusive | are offered an opportunity to com- | pete for prizes for the best essay on Je ach of the following Moticr’s | Day, May 11; j_ Inline with t | Dakota State fering the pri of Elks hasypa action of the North Association in of- the Bismarck lodge sed a resolution open- ing the contest to all schools within j th lodge jurisdiction, H. J. Dneme- ‘land has been named y chairman, The purpose of the contest is to stimulate an interest in the public schools by the lodges as well as con- vey to the scholars that the Elks lodge is interested in thea schools. The Bismarek lodge’s jurisdiccion embraces Kidder, Emmons,+Burleigh, Melntosh, Logan id MeLean coun. Th conditions of the essay contests are as follows: are open to all stu- sixth and ineluaing the twelfth grade, living within the urisdiction of 1199 Lodge. Each contest is divided into two group: rade group and a high school group. 2. All ays must contain not. less than 500 nor more than 700 words 3. ays must be written on one side of puper only. 4 he student must write his full , home addre: rade and age upper I¢gft hand corner of first sheet of manuscript. 6, All essays on Mother, muct be in the hands of the Lodge y Com mittee by noon, Saturday, May, 1s 1924 6. All essays on The Flag, in the hands of the Lodge Committee by noon Saturday, June Tth, 1924, The judges, in Avarding 1. Contests dents above the nan in be the writing, spelling, cerity. PRIZES Grades 7th and 8th First Prize es Second Prize . hird Prize . y on Mother and the he Flag, (Each to be 1 from all entries, both grades State Association Elks, and -the best group will receive prizes: aor Prize $35.00 contributed Sfate Elks Association. i 00 contributed ion, 00 contributed of North three the Dakota of each following by Elks Third Pr State Elk: All essay: Duemeland, Chairman tee, on or before the above, | Judges of contests within Bismarck | Lodge Number 1199 will be announced | at a later date. Judges for the State Contest are: President S$. T. May, Dickinson} Normal School; Hon. A. M. Christ-| ianson, North Dakota Supreme Court; Doctor Raymond Bolton, District De prizes, will consider originality, bend puty, Grand Exalted Ruler. Be SEA ROE neatness and “| WHEN DAKOTA and high school) will be sent to the «| Charles I. | Beach after April 8% the average the ased, but on they are still] n 1890, and for sa whole they are only | ent h now a little more than number of employes t there were in 1890. These employe: receive, in total, a little than six times as much compensation as was paid to the emg « 1890 which means that the average rail-| road employes pay is now 2.8 times! much was in 1890. This cer t they have shared n the upward tenden- labor, In the face} nsportation costs | per cent, and costs less than 50 per the Northern Pacific lower than they were untry more aS how very: libe cy of A of this, freight t have increased only y enger cent.” REBEL PARTY TO ENTER U..? New Orleans, Mar. 22. boat Saragossa with Adolpho D: La Huerta and other Mexican rev- olutionists on is headed for Gal-| it was believed to- Mexican circles. on intercepted | | 9 The gun- was based radio messages DENLES Galveston, 1 —Adolpho De La Huerta ader of the revolu- tion against President Obregon of Mexico is at Frontera, preparing with other rebel Jeaders for a “more ruth less form of warfare,” according ot Adolpho Jiminez, rebel consul here. Denying reports that De La Huerta had left Mexico for Galveston Jim- inezesaid that the leader of the revolt was preparing a proclamation to the Mexigan people declaring the pur- pose. of his civilian and military fol- lowers to prosecute the conflig: finish-“regardless of sacr‘ FUNERAL SERVICES TOBEHELD MONDAY Funeral services for the late John W.Kiley, who passed away at a local hospital early yesterday morning, will be held Monday morning at 9 o'clock from St. Mary's Pro-Cathedral with Father Slag in charge of the funeral services. Pall bearers will be: S. S. Clifford, Joe Berger, Matt Boespflug, J. N. Roherty, J. D. Healow and J. W. Murphy. Interment will be made in St. Mary's cemetery. CUMMINS RITES TO BE MONDAY » Funeral services will be held at 9:30 o'clock Monday morning for Thegdore A. Cummins, 59, pioneer merchant of Mandan, who died yesterday in Bismarck. Mr. Cum- ins had. been a resident of Man- in. since 1983. He ‘was a director. of the First National Bank, Beal: of the Cummins, company, vi president of the Mandan Creamery and Produce company, owned’ the Bton Brothers department store at endive. Mayor Henke has dssued proclamation calling upon all | who will d aeeting of the Minnesots Con- nee at Minneapolis, Christian Seience Church Sunday service at 11:00 a. m, Subject, “Matter. Sund, school at 9:45 a. m. Wetinesday evening testimonial nteting at & o'clock. A reading room is open chureh building every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, except legal ays, from 2 to 4 p. m. are welcome to attend these ser- and to visit the reading room. . GEORGES CHURCH Dr. Ryerson, Rector, Third y in Lent. celebration of the Holy munion. This will be a corporate Commun- ion to which all the confirmed mem- vers of the Womans Guild are ex- pected to at ST Com-}| 16 a. m Little Ones” in Morning prayer and sermon at & S “Caiaphas one of the Actors in our Lords Passion.’ » Mid-Week Instruction Service day evening of the 1 ach at the Lenten ser Dickinson on Wed- | r. Eltsworth, be the Lenten y evening, § p.m ngelical Church | enth and Rosser streets, rom 9:45 to 10:45 All other are conducted in English language. Sundi school from 10:45 to 11:45 w. m. followed by a brief message from the pastor on “The Wreck of Brilliant Career A cordial welcome to all, The Evangel 1 League of ¢ E. will be in charge of Mr, Geo. Cordon, cuss the subject of “Per- sonal Soul-winning Work in the class room of the church at 7:15 p.m. rp he Inte in the basen’ same hour charge. E sery the diate League will meet nt of the church at the Mrs. MeDonald will be in : evangelical service at 8| Special mus rdial welcome to all. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Dr. S. L. Halfyard, Pastor. Prof. Harry L. Wagner, Organist. ) A. M. Public Worship. lude. ngels Voices Are Sing- |ing” By Shell Organ Offertory Solo, Selected, | schoclkont Sermon theme: McCABE ‘By Mrs. ML C. “What is in Thine Organ Postlude, Sunday School. is requested. M. Junior League. . Epworth League. The meeting will be under the di- rection of Group 2, A special pro- eam and special music. :30 P. M. Public Worship. Organ Prelude, Anthem “Abide with us for i* Toward Evening.” Organ Offertory. Special musical number. Sermon theme, “The Highest Cross | in the World.” | Organ Postlude. You are invited. a friends. Come and bzing FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rév. H. C. Postlethwaite, D. D. Minister. Miss Marion Lesher, Organist. Morning Worship at 10:30 a. m. 7 | Address: “Some Problems of To-| day” Gov. R. A. Nestos. | Special music the | composed of Mesdames Barnes, Scot- horn, Messrs. Halverson and Humph- 'reys. er departments at 12 o’clock, Senior Christian Endeavor at p.m. Subject. “The Personal Touch Winning Others to Christ.” Evening Worship at 0 p. Address. “Illiteruey” Miss Nielson. Chorus Choir under the direetion of Mr. Humphreys. Anthem: “Christ the Great King. Come” Chas, H, abriel, ‘Anthem: Selected. Monday evening at 7:30 the Girl Reserves will meet in the church par- | lors. uesday at 4:30--Junior Christian Endeavor meets in the Chapel. Subject: “Church Membership” leader. Ruth Clausen. ‘Wednesday 7 7:80 p. m, Prayer ineet- ing. 6:31 in Hazel FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Cortier Avenue B and Fourth 1. L, R. Johnson, ‘Pastor. We welcome all strangers and vis- 1 feepiaae thouses to close during; itors to our morning worship begin-| fashionable ! ning prompfly at 10:30, and the even- i in the Now is | jspeak to the j the | Real | Forest products ... quartette, | Junior Bible school at 9:30, all oth-| . March 21.—He's mily of 12 children, paid for a home and bought a flivver on a y that never exceeded $150 a month And he u kiddies plenty to e More tha children Zz his wife and all ad—and still ha d good warm clot> every one of £ a good education, Yet Joth J. Kansas City polic dec and his fam- ily never have dropped to “European | standards of living. | “I confess my salary hasn't always | The children are a enjoy adding their the tt | 7:30. The pastor will | Younger members" of congregation in the morning on “The Bricks That Spoiled The Build- ing.” The new Director of Religious Ed- ucation for the Baptists of North Da-| kota, Rev. C. H. Burrill, will speak in the morning and meet the lead and teachers at the young people's hour in the evening for conference. | With spring officially here and/ with Easter so close, a fine oppor-| tunity is offered for beginning Sun-| day school attendance, not only the children but by ull. We mect ut noon, There are ¢ The thrifty Crusaders 0. Rev. Burrill will m young people and the teachers also} at that time) i Rev. 0, S. Jacobson, State Pastor,| will present in the evening a lecture from slides, Those who saw the oth- er slides presented by Rev. Jacobson will remember that they were good,| us these promise to be. The subject | will be, “We Can Finish It.” - We find that children enjoy the} prayer meeting after supper Wed-| nesday evenings. They take part in| all the exercises including prayer. Why not more in n these meetings + Philippines Have Two Millions Of Wealth Manila, —The total wealth of the Philippine Islands is estimated at $2,120,000,000 by the bureau of commerce and industry. The princi pal items follow: Real estate paying taxes $739, mpt from by ! | },000,000 x 124,937,000 Implements and devices. 1 739,000 Livestock Railroads : Electrical plants and tele- phone tems Private telegraph and tel- ephone system ; Government telegraph ‘and telephone systems .. 1,672,000 iy sesh .-. 7,600,000 | igation systems “ 10,347,000 | Agricultural products ... 617,000,000 Industrial products . 130,692,000 = 400,000,000 25,000,000 2,000,000 60,000,000 55,080, 000 15,704,000 1,522,000 Fish . Mineral products Miscellaneous . Bank Loans Under Serutiny| Grand Forks, Mar. 22. ena |made by the Scandinavian-Amer- |ican Bank of Fargo for purposes |varying from sheep’ raising in | Minnesota to salmon fishing in | erceaes on security which ranged; from North Dakcti bank stocks to} j@ fishing boat on the Pacific Ocean | |were under investigation today in) the trial of H. J. Hagen, former [resident of the bank, charged with accepting Ceposits when the | bank wag insolvent. Too Late To Classify ROOM AND BOARD in modcrn| | home. ‘This room’ ix sultaple for |. two and close in. | ferred. 316-8rd St. i Gentlemen pre-| G-22-3t i BANANA pow ‘The banana may have lost some of its’ prestige as Syric material, but | i it has » new importance as the most color of the present } time. Makes 1 You can drive a True Blue Oakland Six through sain and mud for wel, allow the spattered mud to re- main on the finish— And then—quickly and easily wipe off this dirt and mud with any kind of cloth, even without the use of soap, water or. com pounds— So that—the original lus- trous body finish of the car is restored in all its beauty, without a danag- ing scratch or mar! Oakland ‘has revolutionized motor car body finishes by adopting and perfecting the application of a radically different substance — Duco. Oakland’s New Finish This Rossible It is a beautiful, durable, weather-praof. coating, impervious alike to sun and wind, rain and snow, and the alkaline air of the desert. How fitting that the True Blue Oakland— the car with so many advanced features— should be 'the first car to offer this remark- able finish! < This—in itself —is reason pasugh why you should see the True Blue Oakland before buying.any.new motor car, regardless of price. STAIR AND PEDERSON )SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 1924 alderman, P. A. Cook, in a quiet, but decisive election last; Thursday by a majority of 72, the vote being 159 to 87. This was practically the only is- sue in the election, and not a very exciting one at that as neither can- didate did any clectioneering. MAIDS FIRST BOBBED HAIR (Elgin, N. D. News When the Indians were at war with other tribes and a young brave warrior was killed, his wife would cut her hair off in the same style, as the young white ladies do now, only they did not go to the village barber to have the job done in style. They cut it off themselves, fre- ith a butcher knife. s at a general sfore some time ago and met an old friend e—a Sioux Indian, We versing of matters that © years ago, and two young ladies came into the store. They both had their hair bobbed to a fai u-well, My old nd’ looked at them and said: “Two ydung widows. Was their husbands killed in the MI ED METAPHORS LIZZIE ANN: Brother Congo, I hear Sis Johnson's dead. When she gwine ‘be interned? BRO. CONGO: Dey ain't gwine be no interment. ol LIZZIE ANN: BRO. CONGO: decided she's to Life. How come? Ne fambly hab be inériminated. Bismarck Shoe. Hospital Henry Burman, Prop. SHOE REPAIRING First Class Workmanship * First Class Material BEACH MAYOR NAMED Beach, N. D., March 22.—Captain Cook will be mayor of He won.this honor ayer his fellow Special Attention Given To Parcel Post Orders Bismarck, - - N.D. Few youngsters today ever saw a horse-hair sofa. They wouldn’t know what to do with a fire taper, carpet stretcher, or coal oil lamp. They couldn’t braid rags into a rug, or wind yarn without tang- ling. But they know the how and why of typewriters, phonographs, telephones, automobiles; what happens when a push of the but- ton gives light, or a kodak’s flash fixes their image on paper. f Their education is as modern as the advertisements they see. They have’no more use for the lamp and chimney of yesterday than you for the wick and tallow of the day before. Advertisements ; induce such progress. They urge wide use that means improvement. They help you lift the out-of-date into the attic — rid you of the water buckets and soap kettles of slave- dom. They bring late improve- ments within your reach, Read the advertisements reg- ularly.. Keep alert to the new. WITHOUT . ADVERTISING, YOU WOULD NEVER.KNOW.A PRODUCT'S WORTH UNTIL YOU/HAD BOUGHT IT.

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