The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 8, 1925, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT STATES’ DEBTS OVER BILLION AND ONE-HALF Per Capita Debt of States 13.89, Nation-Wide Survey Shows survey of 5 which s eost ways and bonu it the largest chusetts 4 of which Carolna with vrnia with $80,1hs, Michigan with raska and bite w its trust fund stent of $1,963,700 The highest per eapita debt of Union is that of © of eseh inhabit ne the nation vith $3%.87, 76, Norta x Ma sixth $0.66, uchusetts England with und Pent capita debt Atlantic st per South North Ca olina and Florida, are nest with Below the trv 1 whe » for the coun re the East North Central division with a debt of $945, East South Central with $6.48, West South Central with $561 and Moun tain div debt of $1182 that the of the proximately It is inte note total bonded fetes ut present. is half a billion dollars er than the entire Federal de! 1916 and the per capita is $407 larger indebtedness in MAN BRAVES CHASE OM NATIONAL PARK nal k, Utah. (A) Q ased out y three PIUTE IS DEVIL 1 Piute Indian 5 season new ope: national abode terrible Inaians doy, and t night This Indian superstition proved a to early rs, and. dur- playground. that Zion of the dead, gods heretofore at during: aid ever stay “the and Lew hone wi blessing hont, Piute medicine South South Car- | the tragedy that came buildings where it i story that h a HS" a find Tt is alw seetion of th Sometimes few discoura night in the Toronte jail the sunlight are But it only like a moonb bars deeper of ink. e yloom a pool Plotting to E s barred building were three | ¢ Two were 16 and the other|t In thi girls. was 21, Why wore they there? We men aire beasts. These girls, f such men, were under vomen of the streets There wasn't why the want fre But the jail was too gloomy. And|t tes ome} because entence * shabby little hould | p ed by opening day vis-/ itors for the exact details of, Indian legend about the canyon. “Chi any Horses, he ean tell,” ine man replied Questioned as to where Chief Many Horses could be found he said, t year Zion k red to entertain tour, large scale. has been pr ist travel on ENGLISH COUN FACE London-— () Despite the that the temptation to counterfeit money is much greater now than in any oth ment ng the Counterfeiting about 100 y ago, wis punishable by the di penalty, Offenders, however, still dealt with most severely, bi the England ngland, § 3 its time almost g tub on counterfeiters. Detectives of this bureau work with the aid of dealers in paper, ink, inery and other apparatus usually required by coun- terfeiters, and in most instance swoop downy upon the offenders | fore they flood the market wi made mone HUDSON BAY RAILWAY MAY BE USED BY MOTOR CARS Winnipeg, Man., July 8.—(@)—After rusting in idleness eight secret stretching through 25 miles of rich hunting and fishing country from The Pas, Manitoba, northeast to Ket- tle Rapids, will at last be utilized if a unique proposal of 8. M. Haultain, a railway construction engineer of Winnipeg, is accepted by railway au- thorities.. Construction work on the Hudson Rav Railway was discounted in 1917, after it had been completed to with 100 miles of Hudson Bay. The object of the project was to give the Man- itoba wheat fields short egress to salt water. Work ceased when authorities questioned advisability of completing the railway, because of the short navigable season on Hudson Bay— some years being of only ten weeks duration. Haultain proposes that flanges be provided by the railway authorities, which could be fitted to automobile wheels, thus opening that otherwise inaccessible region to hunters, fisher- men and tourists. The railway could be placarded for movement of cars in one direction on odd days of the month, and the opposite on even days. A light derailing shoe would be car- ried to provide for emergencies, ELECTRIC COOKERY MEANS COOKING IN COMFORT | i BY Holl. they ric and fame. oblivion Tomorrow Gishes | and R wood, C: For « few 3 the wave of popularit Then comes ineseapable LL it, J. BIRDWELL « the unsons, Talmad: rd from ckley, Tor 7 c t Chester ia Westbrook, which reflected aly, Barnett and trod upon the s glory and wealth And today, who single name ‘among wood, like the rest 0 fers restful haven ping years throw ard, remembers them? | Holly the world, of. or those whow into the d “I want you 3 Vill Blair, You'll ’ Tt is truly Bohemian.” this endorsement of one of Hollywood's most conspicuous night life ‘centers, I accepted the invita- tion The Greenwich Village ied down a flight of w in the basement Christie building. “Am, ¢ of futur [istic etchings upon the walls. Cou- { secreted in booths. The bobbed ary-eyed gir! in the dim- hted wall cavern upset) a hot gingerale. Her companion, 8 and , oiled, saves the al Precious bottle companion. | Dancing contests. A lack” of adults Most. of habitues youths from high school. | “It’s a great Bohemian place, isn’t| \it2” eagerly queries the press-agent. I nod. “Yes, but I didn’t see any Bohemia e out to the tonight,” f t t tle al noticeable. seem mere} Mildred Hogan, holding her three- year-old daughter by’ the hand, was in a Las Angeles court where she is suing her husband, James P. Hogan, famous director, for separate main- tenance. The judge was asking if a veronciliation might he effected, “No, your honor,” the woman. re- plied quietly. “I’ve taken him back| a lot of times, but I'm through now. Jim used to be a good soldier back in the old Pelham Bay days, and he used to drill with a nice new gun at Fort Lee. Then along came a movie company one day and Jim got stage- struck. : “Now jhe’s a famous picture di- rector, making thousands’ every jmnonth and he’s forgotten the old | }IRL KILLERS even a life of articular reason | bu and ironing.” The “Dumbrowsky.” w Justice.” Jr., a produger, was makin: with the dog, Peter the Great, en- Cc misery may look better} in the buildi: ht. they conspired ts roid Isabel Prows sur-old chums, Bessie nie MeMinn. Worms Way Out Jennie found she could squeeze her lim body throguh the hole in her ell door where food passed in o her. She stole kitchen. helped the other virls piek 1 nd led them into the cor unserewed the electric dark as the pit ‘it of eternal night, twisted in keep behind some knives from t iv shapes hat we barred windows.) days wien I used to do hi: 5 washing: of “Motegraphy 3: ‘the American} for the year. They are, ipany announces their thr Never r Lonesome and Beauty At that, have not changed so mue! | Rudolph Valentino is | making a movie from a story by Poushkin. title of the famous yarn is! “Boob audiences,” as the sales de- partment of many film companies f¥ectionately term the public who} iT their pictures, would never| come Rudy in a picture beled | “Dumbrowsky,” they So Rudy titled it happened that John Considine, itled “The Untamed.” Neither Considine nor Valentino! isfied with their own titles exchanged-—Rudy the itle intended for the dog AWAIT TRIAL | and let themselves out, | of th A m ti th w where itis | UP. | pot w | or stare blankly » u la th Then, at night, she crept,} had a little consideration for us, and | draw one yourself, : ACETYLENE ~ WELDING Having engaged an expert welder, we are in a position to give you expert service. We weld everything. Also repair springs, any spring made, or old rearched. + G. E. PETERSON 714 Thayer St. spring Jennie jd RCK TRIBUNE THE BISMA | Bert. Pos. Mr fat le | Swanson Dollar ‘atre, was bidding Al man, manager of the show house, best wishes on his af appointment to general manag- f the Famous Players-Lasky ain is our loss.. And Mr. fman's success is assured,” said Kaufman's permanency and success ix more than assured as he is brother-in-law of Adolph Zukor, the man who owns the controlling interest in the big studio. one tr of the it is void of ambition, gi ie little heed. Because I have learned that ambition still surges in the hearts and-minds of, st, some of the film producers. Take for example, Harry Rapf, producer out at. the Metro-Goldwyn- Mayer studios, Harry has just instructed his press-agent, Jack NeVille. to hence- forth exploit him as, “The Zieg- feld of motion pictures, | a connoisse: of feminine pulchritude and beauty.” Among the many things’ Gloria brought with her on her tiiumphant, return to this cinema j burg, including Hubby Marquis, et jal, was a Deauville Wheel chair—one pf those that have a bicycle contrap- jtion hoisted on the rear ned where the operator victim about. After bringing her wheel chi down to the studio, Gloria conscrigt- sits and pedals the ‘ed Oscar, the highly-tinted ebony hootblack, into service as operator for her vehicle. Oscar was given an immaculate livery of.white, with cap to_match, Now Oxcar’s scle duty in life is pedal Marchicness Swanson t 'xhout the lot, from set to set, in her | veiled-in carriage. ‘rointment from the mavie nahility, | Since the ap- Oscar has developed quite a delicate {sense of aloofness. No longer is he ‘seen ii his old haunts and never {does he loiter around his cld stamp- IE CARROLL, 16 NIE McMINN, 16; AND | . UPPER LEFT | RTURE IN THE 5 THROUGH WHICH | E McMINN GIRL ESCAPED. i y called Mrs. Margaret Mick, the She groped her way down! and strapped t between two of the cells, | Then they tore her keys from her, fo fourth inm: ed to go with Refuses to Gladys Palmer, th f the cell block, refu hem. So they cursed her and left nd Gladys heard the mo of the atron die into long sobs that nally ceased. In the morning attendants found he matron dead. The girls met se men y on the outskirts of the McMinn returned to uring. the day, heard natron was dead, and g: The other th ve herself ested by ck in jail, facing: ‘Then th the iron wall, Bessie’s Joke other times the tartness and of the streets comes to buoy nd they/ joke and e Carroll says of could at least have At ertnes p the 1ugh, he matron, “sh © died.” he three girls pro » rest of their lives in the peni- © that society will be safe, isn’t much, of a moral to Unless, perhaps, you can ably will spend 0 there « tale, ny the one belpnging to the Bert -Lytell, serving as master of “remonies, at | Grauman’s Million PUB ng ground—the shoe shine stand. Leaves from my Hollywood dairy: Dinner with Clara Smith Hamon, beautiful creature of tragedy, who, four years ago shot to death Jake Hamon, _multi-millionaire of Okla- homa. e for a brighter light in her dark eyes the years since her sensational trial have not changed her outward appearance. But her perspective toward the world and its nis something of a reborn qual “I have never been so happy i life. God has been mer kind to me and I feel sure [ha paid all the obligations 1 took the world.” c e1 “ISN'T AN AUTO IF IT WON’T RUN,” SAYS DEALER “A lot of people think that an au- tomobile is a mass of iron and stecl put together in such a way that un- der certain conditions it will propel itself,” says W. Lahr of the Lahr Motor Sales Co. “As a matter of fact, when a man out to buy an autemobile he shopping for something more merely a machine, “What he really wants to buy automobile transportation—the mile he is going to get out of the machin “And the more he keeps his mind on the thing he really wants, the more likely he is to get the car he wants.” RAL OF NOT! DWARF ATTENDED BY THOUSANDS Manila--(#)—-Diki_ Diki, the Moro dwarf of Jolo, who 3 known throughout the Philippines as well as in Borneo and many other islands in the South Sea, died recently in Zamboang: He was visiting a friend there when he contracted a cold ond died of pneumonia. Diki Diki, despite his 49 years, was only 37 inches ‘in height and weighed only 25 pounds. He is sur- vived by his widow, Bunjung Fa- tima, who i years old, 35 inches in height and weighs 20 pounds. The wedding of this diminutive LIC AUCTION ON THE C. 0. ENGDAHL FARM, THE SEY OF SECTION 4, GIBBS TOWNSHIP, ABOUT 8 MIL NORTHEAST OF BISMARCK. : FRI., JULY 10, 1925: :00 O’CLOCK FARM MACHINERY ‘4 Wagons; 2 Sleighs; 3 Wagon Boxes; 1 Manure Spreader; 1 Spring Wagon; 2 Gang Plows; 2 Van Brunt Drills; 3 Dises; 1 Harrow, 26 feet ness; 2 Header Boxes; 2 Stacker; 1 Sweep Rake; 1 6 Sets Har- Mowers; 1 Jahack Hay Hay Rake; 2 Hay Rack: 1 Feed Milf; 1 Hog Motor; 2 Four Bottom Dise Plows; 1 Three Bottom Disc Plow; Engine Plows; 2 Three Bot: 1 Corn Planter; 2 Horsepow vator; 1 Cultivatoi; 1 Two 2 Four Bottom John Deere tom Moline Engine Plows; ers; Lumber; 1 Dise Cult Section Harrow; 1 Bradley Sulky Plow; 1 25 H. P. Steam Engine, Tender, Tank and Wagon; 1 12-20 Hyder Gas Engine; 1 Post Drill 1 McCormick Push Grain Binder, 12 feet; 1 Deering Header; 1 Corn Lister; 1 Post Hole Digger; 1 36-60 Reeves Separator; 1 ‘Anvil ; 1 Die; 1 Binder, 6 feet. Livestock, Hogs and Poultry 14 Head Horses—7 Sow: s and 30 Spring Pigs— 39 Chickens—6 Turkeys —Also— A half interest in 128 Head of Cattle and 13 Small Calves. TERMS :—Ail sums under $20.00 cash, over that amount time will be given until October 15, 1925, on bankable paper .bearing 9% interest but — Anyone wishing time, must make arrangements with his own bank before coming to the sale. 2% discount for cash. All purchases premises. must be settled before removal from FREE LUNCH BEFORE THE SALE C. 0. Engdahl Estate f Owner 5. M. Thompson, Auctioneer, __ First National E WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1925 r tavo years ago was one of the noted events of its kind. Diki i's funeral, conducted according to Mohammendan rites, was attend- ed by thousands of people. For a number of years Diki Diki exhibited himself at carnivals in. the Philippines and adjoining islands. GERMAN TELLS OF HUMANS OF THE PERIOD 50,000 B. C. Heidelberg, July 8-—(#)——The ideas of mankind :50,000 years ago. was the i se by Professor ity at the Con- gress of German Philologists. About 20,000 B. C. the art of the glacial period began to flourish in Eurdpe, said the speaker. This art, he as- serted, had its origin somewhere around 60,000 B. C. He claims that it has been fairly well established that 40,000 B. C., or thereabouts, the Neanderthal beings were superseded by a race resembling that of . the present day. This race had a well-defined cult of the dead. These early proge’ of our present race firmly belie in an existence after death. It has been clearly proved that they feared the dead, as their limbs frequently were broken before burial to prevent them from harming the living, cording to the speaker. TO PRESERVE FOREST _ Vancouver, B. C.-Frank J. Barn- jum has bought a stand of timber near here and has provided an en- dowment fund, so that it will be left standing forever as an example of the British Columbian forests be- fore they were leveled by the lum- berman’s axe. NEW MOVIE COMBINE Melbourne —An Australian and New Zealand moving picture com- bine with a capital of $15,000,000 has been formed. 1 1 1 | paneer nates IRISH CHILDREN MINDS REAL ESTATE MEN PREDICT "MANY SALES With a bumper crop practically assured, the real estate men of the city are busy with prospects for sales I. One man reports that ast week he sent out one in this county and h a ber of talks with others and deal of encouragement for fall and winter to local people. He also says that the past weeks he has sent out several hun- dred letters to agents in other states, including South Dakota, Minnesota and Towa, and has received some en couraging replies and he belie by next year there will be a ¢ many outsfde buye: “There will be some outsiders in this fall, but most of them will be merely — shopping around this year, but next ye: the results from this year’s cron realized and the farmers and renters in the other states have money i their pockets, there will be many outsiders in to pick up the big bargains to be had here,” the Leal dealer iN d, TTING TO U.S. SAYS DOCTOR Dublin, Juiy s- before the commission on the the Irish language in the Irish sp ing districts, Dr. William O’Beirne, medical officer of County Galway, said that Irish was seldom used by officials of the local bodi in the county. Very few solicitors were able to converse in Irish and he knew of only one barrister who had mastered the tongue. He did not believe, he said, that the soil in these western districts ay sufficient to maintain the pres- ent population which depended a good deal on friends and families in Amer- ica “From the time they leave school at the age of 12 or 13, the poor chil- dren of Connemara’ have their thoughts fixed on America, and how they can get away to it,” he de- clared. ADVERTISING CONSTRUCTIVE VALUE OF TEN COM. MANDMENTS URGED Portland, Ore., July 8—()—Mod- ern advertising methods applied to the Ten' Commandments “would soon change them from stern prohibition laws to factors contributing to true happiness,” declared Clarence Hamilton of Boston, speaking at ye: terday’s session of the thirtieth In- ternational Christian Endeavor con- vention. “Modern advertising then should adopt the positive form of the com- mandments in order to convince the public that they were not prohibition laws,” said Mr. Hamilton. “Too many persons regard them as prohibition laws and apparently take delight in violating them. They do not appre- ciate their constructive values and the contribution their observance make toward the true happiness of the individual and community.” CHURCH AMPLIFIERS ew York—Voice amplifying de- i have been placed in Westmin- ster Abbey, Notre Dame de Paris and the Cathedral of St. John, the Divine, here. FLOG BLACKMAILERS London—Flogging as a punshment for blackmail is provided in a bjil introduced in Parliament as a re- sult of the Sir Hari Singh case. Announcement On account of so many puzzles coming in from various towns in this territory, making it necessary to get a check of the names included with the puzzles, we have been de- layed in announcing the winners. Prizes were awarded as follows: Ist Prize—F. H. Giermann, Bismarck, s Olive M, Manus, Hazelton, N.-D., $25.00 Cash. 2nd Prize—M D., $7 5 Cash. 3rd Prize—Mrs, C. R. Crawferd, Moffit, N. D., $10.00 Cash. 4th Prize—H. B. Provolt, New Leipzig, N. D., $10.00 Mdse. Credit. 5th Prize—F. J. Bavendick, Bismarck, N. D., $10.00 Mdse. Credit. Gth Prizc—Lester N. Falkenstein, Baldwin, N. D., $5.00 Mdse. Credit. 7th Prize—Carlyle Salhus, Kintyre, N. D., $ 8th Prize—F. L. Fuller, Bismarck, 9th Prize—J. O. Lyngstad, Bismarck, N. D., D., § 5.00 Mdse. Credit. 00 Md: 00 Mdse. Credit. ! Credit. Lahr Motor Sales Co. Distributors Willys-Overland Fine Motor-Cars Sedan $1095 F. O. B, Detrole, tax extra. wheel wiley al. Bedy As anticipated the new . Chrysler Four is being received with unre- si enthusiasm, Those who have been fortunate enough toride in the new car that never before has there beena four that delivers so much in fine performance,somuch in roadabil- ity and riding and driving ease. For the Chrysler Four is a true companion to the Chrysler Six. It represents in a very definite. and sense the applica- tion of the same quality and - fine manufacture that raised the Chrysler Six to its peak’of pop- ularity. . Consequently it is not . surprising that the new Chrysler Fouris already Chrysle: hailed as the most modern and soundest contribution to finer four-cylinder motoring. See it—ride in it—drive it! Call on us—we are only too glad to extend you the opportunity to learn at first hand the many advantages of owning a new r Four. First its price with the hydre coheed trea, es eae Se Ses rahe of, trate: four: Te ‘Cer, Sedan—attractively fooring Club Coupe, Coach and ae Pn l Titan Poogeeaborengerpal (Chepeler meter cars are now delivered tasured for priced from 889$ co $1095, to. b. Detrots Chrysler service everywhere. All dealers ere tt ‘time-payments. Ask about Chrysler's attractive plan, INSURANCE PREPAID ‘one year at full factory list price against fite and theft. —

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