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PAGE EIGHT ‘THE BISMAR CK TRIBUNE TWO ARE HELD FOR MURDER OF FARGO MAN! Fargo, N. D., June 8.—(AP)——With | the arrest of Ed Welch, fisher- man and frog catcher of West Fargo, local police now have two men custody for questioning : the death of Mike Azadian, ra laborer who was killed the night of | May 30 at the suburban town. Welch, | who lives in a dugout on the banks of the Cheyenne river in which | stream Azadian’s body was found, was one of the first party of search- | ers that hunted for the body and has evinced much interest in the | and brought several small ar les that belonged to him to the country officers from points along the river bank where ‘they were found His story, cide with however, does not coin- important’ details of the robbery of Sam and Mike and the killing of the latter, the loc county officers said and he held along with Walter Steine transient, who was found hidi near the scene of the killing and admitted having been at the point where Azadian was killed about the | time of the murder. BAD WEATHER LOWERS NUMBER | AT BIBLE SCHOOL | Owing to the bad weather the a tendance at the Vacation Bible School has dropped to one hundred seventy ut it is hoped that a larger number will be in attendance during the remainder of the week. Pupils will be dismissed at ten thirty o'clock on Wednesday morn- ing so that all may have the oppor- tunity of seeing the parade. Preparations are being made for the closing exercises Sunday after: noon at 3 o'clock at the city audi- torium. There will be demonstra- tions of the work taken up during the two weeks and a pageant will be presented. Here is the University of Wash ington photographed in training just a few days ago, pre-| paring to start East over the North-| ern Pacific Railway for Poughkeep- sie to defend the Intercollegiate rac-| ing trophy which the most north- | western of all colleges won on the | Hudson in 1923 and again last year. | Coach “Rusty” Sallow isn't saying much but his performance of past | years makes hington the big fav- | orite for 19: The crew ern Pacific 9:30 ALM. § due to arrive in morning, dune 8 at 8:54 a through | train to Chicago, Thence the route | hanger here today, unable to land|is over the New York Central, reach- because of a dense fog. ing Poughkeepsie at 2 o'clock the The Lon Angeles arrived over lake | Hurst at 1.49 o'clock this morning.| ~ eastern standard time, 24 hours and 12 minutes after she left to attend the Norse American centennial in Minneapolis and St. Paul. She ried her crew of 37 men. This is the first time the Los An- eeles has heen forced to change a scheduled flight because of engine trouble since she was formerly hand- racing crew, Engine Trouble Forces Blimp Back To Hangar (By The Associated Press) Lake Hurst, Minn., June 8.—The dirigible Los Angeles turned back at Cleveland because of engine trouble f-om her conaemplated flight to Minneapolis, was hovering near her orth Coast Limited at | 6 ed over to the United States by Ger- man last Octobe WHAT A FAMILY “I hang my head in shame every time I see the family wash in the back yard.” “Oh, do Wampus. MAYOR LENHART ISSUES INVITATION TO COME TO BISMARCK NEXT WEDNESDAY Mayor Lenhart, president of the Biomarck City Com today a proclamation declaring next Wednesd: Day.” He formally issued an invitatton for everyhedy in Burleigh, and adjoining counties, to come to town ana! enjoy thmesely He points that the merchants are going to offer al bargains and jiave the finest window displ: that can be gotten up for the inspection of all. Besides that he proposes to welcome all kota weicome—as friends and neighbors. His message is as follows: “To the Pecple of Burleigh and Adjoinign Countie. “On next Wednesday, June 10, the city of B: ck is to have its first circus of the season, when the. Robbins Bros. mammoth 4-Ring shows appear here and give two performances —afternoon and night. “Our merchants, on that day, will offer, to all who come, sp bargaing in iprices so low that it will be well worth while to pay heed to the opportunity. ‘The day is to tbe devoted to shop-buying and show: be a splendid chance for all to visit the state capital, old time friends from far away pcints in the-county, Th be Jarge. “Now ‘hat we have had such wonderful rains and the crop looks 9? Prom’sing, lets all make a day of it hy looking over the choice win dow diopl and the low prices quoted by our enterprising merchants, ag well as go to the show. “The Robbins Bros. circus is the largest in the world giving a otreet parade. Its herds of elephants, its vact menagarie, its hundreds of circus acts. i's Wild West as well as it mammoth patriotic pageant Historic America is well-werth the attention, and the attendance, of all who seek reil enjoyment for themselves and their children, “Therefore I most heartily invite you all to come to Bismarck. You are doub!y welcome and I declare the day a ‘Circus Bargain Hoti- ay. “So come to town, friends, and enjoy yourselves for we you, as a friend and neighbor, with true North Dakcta hospitality ‘A. P. LENHART.” they?"—S. California a right royal North Da oing. It will nd thus meet crowd will hall greet _ The Swimming Pool opens Tuesday, June 9th. See our large assortment of new suits just received. je eps aboard the North- | ae | CAPITOL NOTES | po een SU CHAMPIONS IN BISMARCK TUESDAY UPPER THE 1925 UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON CREW CENTER PRACTICING ON LAKE. LAKE WASHINGTON, SEATT INSERT Leet COACH "RUSTY "CAL' OW) 2nd afternoon. June 20, Instead of Meals”, with food, the No The race comes off the “Famously Good their variety of good hern Pacific dining car staff ha instructed to serve the “Huskies” with training table bill of fare—good substantial food but without “trimmings” that the regula patrons enjoy. The cre of ig cd ern P; ilway rry Gowman”, the sixty-foot shell which the Washington eight hopes to pull across the finish line again ahead of all the other shells. A special car—over seventy feet in length is used to transport the, also is the ——— chairman of the! road commigsion-| to return today/ from W a_ meeting the First Committee. Mr. Milhollan national president of the committee.| Adjutant General G. A. Fraser is at Camp Grafton sypervising the | encampment of the Headquarters de-| tachment of the 164th North Dakota| Infantry, which left today. With | him is Capt. Herman Brocopp. Joseph A. Kitchen, commissioner of | agriculture and labor, is much in) demand as a speaker for various oc-| casions. This week he will give the commencement address at Vaiparaiso| University on “The Field for Trained | Worke} Last night he was the, speaker at the Salvation Army meet- ing here and next week is scheduled to give an address at New England. | Miss Minnie J. Nielson, superin- tendent of public instruction, is in Grand Forks attending the com- mencement exercises at the state university. Corporation reports are keeping the office of the secretary of state busy. Many reports are not ade- quately filled” out and must be re- turned for correction and comple- tion. hundred farmers were seen | state dairy commissioner, and other specialists on dairying and livestock production Several i DON’T MISS IT Bena your mom pase end aaron plainly n, with 10 cents, stamps or coin (and to Chamberlain ' Medicine Co., Des Moines, lows, and re- | ceive in return a trial package eontaini LAIN'ST. forstomac ti COLIC AND DIARRHOEA REMEDY for pain in sto- | bowels, intestinal cramp, colic and diarrhoea; CHAMBERLAIN’S SALVE, | needed in every family for burns, scalde, nd skin affections. T: . BOWMAN UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmer {nu Charge. Day Phone 100 Night Phones 100 or 484R. WEBB BROTHERS Undertakers — Embalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge. Day Phone 246 Night Phones 246-887 W. E. PERRY FUNERAL DIRECTOR Parlors 210-5th Street. fragile craft. removed--the type ordinarily used for transporting stables of rJe horses. The purpose of employing these special cars is to allow room to ship the coaching launch and the shell both in the same car, along with the cars, water and other sup-| plies needed on the Hudson. The shell is placed on high wood- with the coaching ldunch, ". riding underneath, It used to he the custom, according t Coach Russell Callow, to place the shell in but the method now is more s actory. Within an*hour after arriving at Poughkeepsie the shell and launch are in the water, as the travell crane of a nearby lumber company is used to lift thery out of the car. in Stutsman county | putting on a campaign for purebred orders for fifty sires were George F. Sha- fer is one of three residents of Bis marek who were honored at the re- cent I. 0. 0, F. convention at Devi i The attorney general was ap grand guardian, Brigadier H. ton was recommend- i decorative honor pointed jeneral ed for t that Odd Fellowship can bestow on| | Patriarchs, ation of ¢ was elected g: of the grand decor- and J. A. Bitzer nd master. Tax Commissioner Thoresen is soon to become a full-fldeged mem- ber of the capitol colony. He is mesing his family to Bismerek from: Dunn Center. J. J. Moe, a member of the high- y commission, discussed details of nes omer [oa thle Saleheed forme, No nareotice Pocket tin 380, The car is one that is; arranged sp that the one end can be| road projects under way with the Cass county board of commissioners Friday. Miss Minnie J. Nielson, superin- tendent of public instruction, has |been presented a gavel by the men in shop courses at the State Nor- mal and Industrial school at Ellen- dale. Various kinds of North Da- | gavel. i Centennial speaker, also spoke at Jan open meeting of the Saturday Lunch club in Minneapolis Saturday, taking as his subject, “Some Ques- tions of Present Day’ Importance.” _|YOUTH LOSES | LIFE IN LAKE AT WINONA Winona, Minn., June 8.—(AP)— | Walter Clapp, 19, high school athlete Jof Blair, Wis. met death late Sat- jurday while seeking relief from the heat in Clear Lake at Clear Lake, He started to swim across the called for helps went down and never came up. The body was |recovered. No water was found in his lungs and death was attributed to [xa trouble, Ww lake, VIOLENCE WALKS ABROAD AGAIN IN PORTUGAL Lisvon, Spain, June 8.—The pop- julation of Lisbon has fallen re- |cently under the terrorizing influ ence of the Red Legion, a secret society of malefactors notorious tor ibomb outrages, assassinations jand robberies. Several groups cf these ‘bandits ‘have, during the last |few weeks, carried out their ex- ploits in ‘broad dayliht, entering the principal national banks and womanding, with pointed pistols, i large sums of money, and imposing silence by threats of vengeance on the clerks and their families. A few days ag, in a busy thor- ;oughfare, a collector was assaute! jand robbed of his bag containing everal thousands pounds. While {two men attacked the collector, jothers discharged pistols in the most approved movie style, effec- tively covering the retreat of the [attacking party to a side car, in which they made thetr escape. As these repeated occurences jare being carried out without the |immediate intervention of the po- ‘lice, and without arrests being made, the newspapers have cen- | sured the negligence of the police. | Now, however, the authorities have tarrested in the assault on the col- j tector and several other members of the Red Legion. At the same time all the newspapers print a :Statement from ‘the commission- ,er general of police in which he | protests against the injustice of the references made to this corpora- tion. He affirms that the impun- ity of the criminals is due to the terror and cowardice of the vic- tims, who refuse to lay complaints against them. As soon as the membors of the Red Legion were arrested dyna- mite bombs exploded in various quarters of the city, fortunately causing no lors of life, though sev- eral places of ‘business ‘have suffer- EAGLE TAILORING & HAT WORKS Cleaning Pressing Repairing Remodeling Dyeing LADIES AND MEN’S CLOTHES Hats Cleaned and Reblocked 24 Hour Service on Mail Orders. We Call For and Deliver. AN-A-CIN ‘Stops Pain AZ Bismarck, Wednesday Night and Day attendant Phone 687 | Tickets including Reserved Phone 58 June 10 Seats on Sale Show Day At Lenhart’s Drug Store at Same Price as Charged Upon Circus Grounds. ~ ‘kota wood were used in making the Governor Sorlie, a Norse-Amcrican: THE HOSS’ BOSS Training a horse to do h tricks an ay simple but it is inreality very. diffi cult to accomplish. The horse is ni turally nervous animals and is equal- ly high spirited. So to get him to do out of the ordinary requires a great desl of n@ience. The camera man caught Migs Belle Hamilton, the famous equestrienne of the big Rob- bins 4-Ring circus that comes to Bismarck next Wednesday. She stands among the greatest riders of the horse and with her high school jumping, she presents a picture. of livliness, of skill and daring that will be long remembered by. those who witness the performance next Wednesday. The show comes this year double its former size, through the pur- chase of the U. S. Circus Corporation property. There are three herds of elephants, two hundred wild animals and vast army of performers and emplo; six hundred in all and all are promised the “circus time” of their lives if they go. ed severely, one of them being completely destroyed. NO DOOM TODAY It was raining in Los Angeles on the morning of the eclipse, and one enterprising youngster was yelling his wares: “Poiper! All about the end of the world being postponed on account of the rain!”—Argust (Seattle). NEXT QUESTION “Hubby, how much do you love me?” “How much do you need?”—Louis- ville Courier- Journ: Cantilever shoes “perfectly VE dia A. W. Lucas 0. ; (Esther Fink, Lahr; Mrs. John Mandan Dischiarged: Mrs. Sidney Lee, Tap- pen; Ainna M. Geiss; Mrs. Joseph Wald, Winona, Minn.; W. N. Alver, Brisbante; Joseph Wilhelm, Linton; Mrs. Robert Greiser, Wishek; Mrs. F. H. Diavenport and'baby girl; Mrs Christ. Wetzstein and baby girl, Man dan; Mis. Fred Braun, Glen Ullin; Ethel sthaffer, Mrs. Ira Bellwood, Haynes; Leona N. Ollapena; Agnes Dancing} Bull, Van Hook, Son Born a Mr. avd Mrs. Earl Beatt announce the birth of a son Saturday. 1WAUGHTY ROYALTY Tommy—Father, are kings queens tylways good? Father—Not always, my son; not when theire are aces out against them. —London Answers. The first circulating library of which thsre is any record was estab- lished at Dumfermline, Eng., in 1711. f GITy NEWws | pode iy Bismarck Hospital Admitted Baby Robert Patton Steele; Mrs. Anna Schlichtiny, rison; Mrs. Frank Twogood, G. Gunwall, Taylor; John Rya! lige; Erick Erickson, Fort Rice; George Hubert, Richardton; Freda Knoop, Stanton; Mrs. M. C. Schilting, Velva. Discharged: Mrs. C. F. Stroutz, city; Gust Thiel, Judson; Cha: Larsen, Plaza; Edward Berreth, Ar- tas, S. D.; Christ Voegele, Glen Ul- lin; Melvin Clough, city; Miss E ther Anderson, Hurdsfield; Miss Mayta Bodter, Arena; Harold Lehr, Turtle Lake; Nolan Nichols, Good- rich; Oscar Snyder, Raleigh; Mary Zinnel, St. Anthor Ella Krause, Hazen; Alvina Fischer, Zap; Mrs. Albert Dascher, Hannover; Mrs. Jo- seph, Washburn. é and St. Alexius Hospital Admitted: John Seher, Streete Vern French, Dickinson; Mrs. G. «:| Cantilever shoes \for com- Bletz, Ashley; Elizabeth’ Wetch, Fort fort-lovers. A. W. Lucas Co. A Car in the Spring Is Worth Two In the Fall The folks who own automobiles will drive over three-quarters of the total year’s mileage between now and Thanksgiving. Every day you lose making up your mind to buy a Willys- Overland car means a day of glorious recreation you have lost. LAHR MOTOR SALES CO. Inarecent article on economics in “The Nation’s Business,”’ Foster and Catchings, say: “Profit-making was maintained and developed by American statesmen and legislators, with the approval of econom- ists, because thesé men believed that profit-making by manufacturers, traders and financiers was the most effective way of increasing national wealth.” The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) believes only in profits which accrue from service. This Company is in business to serve its patrons, and through this service to-earn an adequate profit for the stock- holders whose money has made the indus- try possible. Profit is the life-blood of ind , but the profit taken must be an exact return for the service rendered. Profit- eering is abhorrent to the Standard Oil Company (Indiana). tna po! tn id oil rad Sara in serving e and oils is rendering a fundamental service, not only to imme- diate patrons, but to everyone in the Middle West. The progress of the com- munity depends upon these products. Without them, farmers could not produce sufficient food-stuffs, nor could industry luce sufficient clothing, shelter, light, tt and other necessities of life. ‘ The provi of gasoline and oils can PP, Poss mpeg The Standard Oil Company (Indiana), in par- ticular, has developed through years of effort an organization of specialists, men who know their jobs from the ground up, and who think of these jobs primarily as a service. These men are experts. No matter what demand may be made upon them, in the line of their work, they are equal to the emergency. Such a body of em- Company, is a valuable asset to the community, While man is constituted as he is today, Ss be a re= ane gnome sort. And when it result of honest, Service, under- taken for a fair and agreed return, is the most powerful incentive. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) to the last man, is in first and foremost to render service. It is to the and oils as as may be within reach of all. sales on.a continue Standard Oil Company Undiena) General Office: Standard Oil Building 810 South Michigan Avenue, Chicago