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{ PAGE TWO DALLAS WOMAN HEADS UP I GOLF TOURNEY Mrs. Elaine Reinhart, Dallas, Defeats Wisconsin Champion Whitebear, Minn, Aug. 27.--(P) Despite a stiff breeze, winners in the third round. of the Women's Western Gold Championship today had to score par or better over the hilly Whitebear Yacht Club links to win, except in and even there, the victor, ) ne Rosen- thal Reinhart, of 1 . was under par, winning ‘from Bernice W Oshkosh, 7 to 6, as the Wisconsin | champion took 46 for the first nine Mrs. Reinhart was one n only two holes of the but she had four birdies first nine in 39, two b xain a lead of with perfect figures whe & birdie four to end the the 12th hole Mrs. Miriam Burns Horn of Chi even par on the first nin lead of 4 up on Mrs. E. EB nd kept up pace until sh 4 struggle on match, Mrs. Harley Highie of Detroit displ her usu- al brilliant spurt to win from Mrs Jay Cassriel of Chicago, 4 and 3. The finish came when Mrs. Higbie yeeled off four p in a row, while Mrs. © 1 went one over on the tehes eliminated all the ers, except vu with Me rt finals is between the Michigan title holder, Mrs, Higbie, and the Tennes- ce stur, Miss Gaut. All semi-finalists except “Mrs. Higbie have held the title hefore, BURLEIGH CROPS ARE BEST, CLAIM O. W. Roberts, Weather Bu- reau Forecaster, Reports High Yield Burleigh county wheat and corn equal crops in any one of 1 in western North Dakota visited by Roberts, local weather bureau a and Montana, above expectations wheat,” he state: ty, in the v an exceptional ter two counti dui da good crop generally. tions visited for late corn and flax, and for pastures, ranges and alfalfa. the new bridge now under tion at Glendive. Roberts report follows: ally completed, advanced. well tend from fro: evidence clearly proven as during the terri- tory covered by him. nh one instance on the acres of ground, one man p) res of Marquis wheat on ground, while his neighbor adjo: stubbled in 40 acres of the identically same seed. The former received an average of 21 bushels per acre, or a total of 672 bushels, the latter threshed but 6 bushels per acre, or a total of 240 bushels from a‘ field |* much larger. “Climatic conditions in no manner accounted for the difference, “better farming” being the sole cause. It was also more noticeable than ever before that diversification almost in- variably brought the best results, al- though a few straight grain farmers, who farmed well will” make good profits on their investments. “In Montana conditions were not so favorable, except in the irrigated districts. Another noticeable feature, ' is the greatly improved road condi. tions. _ “I found road conditions greatly improved during the past three years. The North Dakota Highway Commis: | sion is entitled to much commmenda- | tion. The roads that are being con- structed are being built right, and the markings are of great assistance |” and comfort to both the business man who has to travel and to the tourist. “When I left North Dakota and went into Montana and South Da- kota, I greatly missed the famil- iar face of Red Tomahawk, as well as the “curve,” “R” and “L” signs, It is only a question of a short time when all federal aid roads in all states will be so marked.” Award Contract For Auditorium Minot, N. D., Aug. 27.—UP)—Con- tracts for the constructions of the auditorium at the Minot State Teach ers’ College were awarded yester: afternoon, at a meeting of the state hoard of administration held at the college, the contract for the general construction work being let to Red- lneer ond Hansen of Wahpeton, at a bid of $54,900. The tctil cost of the auditorium wing as indicated by proposals ac- cepted by the board, will be $62,177. ‘he Minot Plumbing and Heating company was awarded the contract for the plumbing and heating and ventilation, at a bid of $2,865, this being one of the two bids submitted. | New Corporations o——________—__16 Incorporations are: Goose’ River Creamery, _ incorporated, Hilleboro, $15,000, HH. E. Finseth, Ole Targerson and Paul B. hie. BEAD TRIBUNE WANT ADDS ounties: ,» Who returned this week an inspection trip covering her bureau substations in North rops in general are proving | doesn't especially spring “Mountrail coun- inity of Parshall, has ood crop. Portions of Bowman, Hettinger and Adams county are ‘excellent, although some damage from hail resulted in the lat- Grant county pro- ‘Rain was badly needed in all sec- Arrangements were made for the installation of river gages on the new bridges to be constructed at Sanish and Williston, as well as on strue- Vith the exception of some late planted fields, harvesting is gener- nd threshing is well rly planted corn where s nearly out of danger Never before has the f good farming been so | “I CAN | | Winifred Hudnut Says Valen- | | tino Opposed Her Desire for | a Career, Hence She and | Rudy Are on a “Marital Vacation” BY GENE COHN NEA Service Writer New York, Aug. 27--The little tie comedy in which Rudolph tino and) Winifred Hudnut Unho are now starr cuts to a time when a young girl, her heart set on “self-expression,” | overtuined the plans of a wealthy family and defiantly set out to be an! artist In this gesture the girl anti by some time the vogue tor dom) and s for women" and “selfexpres and all things t new are commonph difference was that this girl adly serious. This was ne - pose. Though she readily could chosen a leisurely social tte tually went to work and bh working ever since, What is Worse--she came to love work; to demand it as part of her! lite you read of the sep: | ntinos, or the “marriage "or whatever they cl to call it, please bear this in mind | for it has everything in the world to ao with the temporary or permanent parting of the ways. | It was the analysis that Winifred! Hudnut, lovely in a white turban and clingy silk mo: dress, gave | of the background of probiem, | “Yous I probably was perfectly sat to Mr. Valentino”--she refers — to him at all times as “Mr. Valentine” “but as an dependent tist well that was something els | “Now an independent artist 1! atisfactory to my omplete wife well! Valentino y to. me, well, that “It you will digest this tangle for! a monient you will begin to visualize | | something of the problem in our per-| fectly happy, yet perfectly diseon- tented menage. It is such a ta as can be expected probably only in the lives of artists, both bent upon work. “And in that word work lies the whole crux of the story, It goes back to my girlhood. My family strongly protested my career seeking, but my mother finally saw there was no use blocking me so I went to Europe and stadied. And I have worked ever ne andpoint there was ou have to unders no nee d that Tow to. “Up to the time of my marriage with Mr. Valentino I had felt that I would never let romance interfere with the things I wanted to do. And at first it seemed that. this would work out. For I worked with him. “But, recently he has been engaged in work th an one else. studio all ing and playing wii And so the difficulties began. he is concerned, is the Continental viewpoint regarding. wives. You know haw so many Europeans feel about the place of the wife. And, if it is there, it surely isn’t anything he may wish to appear it crops out {that is, they don't mind — artistic wives, but they want to have some- thing to say about it. And 1 want to he independent, “Of course, this has nothing to do viewpoint I jyst went ahead and did what it seemed I hi was carry on work as I wished. You just can’t have two loves—at — the same time--without ome conflict. One or the other has to give way. “And I do want my artistic inde- pendence. I'm young enough to feel that way. Later these things might not seem so important, all too busy. The whole country is that way. In the film business we do get terribly self-engrossed. It's that takes out time and attention.” So, it would seem, the great ever his spell over others—has found | that he can’t woo his wife from work. And that’s that, | ‘ADOPT NEW ——LBASE PLAN .Kositzky: Will Not Renew Land Leases on Request of Leaseholders nm not to renew leases on hool lands at the request of \leaseholders was reached here today {at a meeting of the state board of! jschool lands. Action was taken, Lund | Commissioner Carl Kositzky said, be- cause of protests from many citizens that renewal of leases without fron | petitive bidding prevented them from obtaining leases on valuable proper- ty. In many cases, Kositzky said, jleases have been renewed in order to} {justify the leaseholder in fall plant- jing or doing other work on the land | | of which he was sure to get the ben- efit. It also was decided that in future all sections. of which one-half is un- {dér cultivation wil be listed as cul- tivated land and leases will be sold on that basis. Three school bond is- jsues were purehased as follows: Pleasant Valley, Oliver county, $2.- |500; Tagns School District. Mountrail county, $2,500, and Fancher school {district, Ramsey county, $4,000. 3:DROWNED IN BOAT TRAGEDY ere, today. New display. of Fall Millin- ery at popular prices at the Sarah Gold Shop. 312 Main MEANS COOKING IN ComForT '*"°° THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WO LOVES” Wanted by Omaha Police on Jilyn Mille | PhyNis Clark, | long The register of the i they w |to the hotel August AN EXCLUSIVE PHOTOGRAPH OF WI) 2D HUDNUT SIX DEPARTMENT HEADS WERE NAMED BY HARDING He tells others. in the midst of all BY CHARLES PL. ident Coolidve the! idend it ybody thought | ngle | tion leaked out- president had no s 5 at “coal policy'—he didn’t know what he'd do in the event of aj; had been runnin told him to do, “More busine: j government ; Hooveresque | from Set own election , though from the — financial yL¥ Hughes wa: Bascom Slem; rtment head who t and then left the) | acne, the saakeup had begun, the administ jon wants done and i farm policy formulated »re he appointed Secre- didn't }composer his experience: aried policy, not to e ta ‘front of Port Sai and Attorney est city in the are mighty carétul a tuemselyes, by pressure ¢ “Perhaps back of it all, so far as|° Walter Long Klansmen Interior Wo neral New a rn ‘Fe ix, tt “Felix chief ¢ can help. But, however liberal they | » President: Harding picked originally. ny keep to administr s without attemptin; in-! year, Metro's 's pol-| “Revelation, jon seems to Immigration r What's more with my affection, In the clash of |ing leftovers are the s men. A couple of thein make thei d to do—which|own i dependently as if there presi some of the vented the labor department and the adminstra be suited with it striction on the present ba | Monday for Seore-| #irl model of the P: Secre- who found her pnt with a pretty free s had to do it within, ul limitations which restrict | him considerably. | make the administra oF “But in this day we don't seem to|asks sit down and analyze little problems|and his di 100K AT THEM! a that might be settled by study. We're] ceived. A, Saunders,| ntlypis claimed to have been the first woman to earn her! ii of the type-! ‘tation is g ances on money admired in financ the “thing we are doing personally [!00's thelr author, 30 xoasips Say matters are piano teaching to teach the intri- ¢ t invented ma- y le ‘sheik” and “perfect lover"—what- | anvthine commerce de-! chi OH, SEE THE PRETTY D Street. Mike Hastings of Pendleton, Ore., could hardly see’ the ceiling of the pe UR TRE new Ealoe Bietion Bueno when be and Mrs. Hastings arrived to ECTRI COOKERY compete in the world’s championship rodeo. EL CY crutches, having broken her leg recently while riding a sky-fishing Hastings holds a record of havi: seconds flat, Hastings is on ing thrown a@ steer in seven FARGO POLICE HOLD 2 GIRLS | IN CONSPIRACY Charge of Conspiracy to Commit Murder D, Aug. ?) M Helen Olson, nted by Om of conspir Fargo, } Neb., police on ter, wee Fargo hotel by members for Iyren, chief of police, re telegram Wednesday from deusen, chief of police at ng him to search all jo rooming houses and hotels, as the ce had veceived informa were headed in police woman would nothing of the nature of the in cu tory of the Miller repli notoriety when Tn reply to a f how long they had be go, she said sententiously, 1c ‘ound show under the 1 ! Phyllis mes of s City. | |CLOSED BAN | = PAYS 10 PER CENT, Foster Heads one Grand Forks, N. D.. Au Payment of a 10 per c nking. department, ~ an- The bank clos This is the first div- nounced June 1, RAIN GENERAL | Two-tenths of an inch of rain felt Burleigh county last night al throughout this mort | ( 1 maximum of upoleon, EHendale .19 Minn, 10, repor ut the weather bur | At The Movies i ELTINGE THEATRE i ‘d Barthlemess is featured st inge for Fri ) new picture “Soul Asia nd filled with action, cx hin trom social life i 1 the wicked- nd ie Love e featured players. hows thous. t ding in from opical islands. he New AT THE CAPITOL Hailed as the finest story of the production of will come to story of a Montmarte soul when. posing: the Madonna of an old legend, i said to be the greatest directorial achievement of George D. Baker, who has had such successes to his credit as “Slave of Desire,” “Toys of Fate” (with Nazimova 1 many others. A really all-star east has been used in the production, It includes such players as Viola Dana, Monte Blue, Lew Cody, Marjorie Daw, Frank r, Edward Connelly, Geor; mann, Kathleen Key, Otto Bruce Guerin, and Ethe “Revelation” promises great enter- tainment. =—————— Don’t Hide Them With a Veil; Re- move Them With Othine— Double Strength. This preparation for the removal of freckles is so successful in remov- ing freckles and giving a clear, beau- tiful complexion that it is sold by all drug and department stores with a guarantee to refund the money if it fail: Don’t hide your freckles under a veil or waste time on lemon juice or cucumbers; get an ounce of Othine and remove them. Even the first few applications should show a won- derful improvement, some of the lighter freckles vanishing entirely. Be sure to ask for the double strength Othine; it is this that is sold on money-back guarantee. Othine Laboratories, Inc., Buffalo, N. FLY- TOxX Gvery Bothle ~~ Pe GUARANTEED ant Minch gun, whieh ¥ ie coust. Tt with tike two weeks. Below it est 100 in APPEAL CASS [sityermine Chinese Murdez ; COUNTY CASES | ans County eiveuit court on Washington, than 100 to have been in : Tc. Mit ssassination of Lin Chun Es Hoi were arrested, it was learned r \ banks for! the Communists. night came after a thy fof 6 jby C. B. Ruthenbury YEAR-OLD ROSE BUSH A rose bush on the wall Hild exn be traced tainty to the eleventh century, BANK juires that trees suitable for HOW ABC London.—A_ music hall pe open with a lever. HAD PLENTY OF NAMES id his name was Ptolem poleon, George Wathingtoi y THURSDAY, AUGUST 2%, 1 GUN TO TAKE LONG JAUNT 3 1.004 pounds, is ahout tot shown fi position for traveling. et fo miles away; m Aberdeen, Md | sult of in dent. grounds. Two Cass county ¢ were to the supreme court t Miller, doing business y We are showing icial doreversn a decisio of John BR | Kuiper, who sought to ob! | grown on land owned jto the eleva ‘th jday and Saturd Workers’ Party he sou si “| from M.S. Hyland as the re. | Street. tes of the Foster opposed hen “California Fruit a ARTS FORE! Before a bank here u rave on land it re planted on areas urming. no: Mammoth Freestone Peaches. Per ‘ormer | Paitin jaa Biue Plums, Per one to pry his mouth | se. CrabvApples:. Perapeckt.s2. vias tiadaascneen Bartlett Pears. ° Per case... . A man. recently es, he was drunk, Just received Munsing wear! G U SSN ER gS Fibre Bloomer | Full line of color: cial, $1.95. A. W. Lucas Co.! Use Gas. It’s the Scientific i} and Stepins. | Very spe-| PHON rined in a aus dismiss: ‘telnumber of the Rose Maric k.| Felt appiiable Hats for school in]. ‘ ; eee old | irks, snecially priced for Fri at. $1.95. 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