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PAGE EIGHT 7 PUT GOD FIRST” | ISTHEURGEOF: EVANGELISTS Large Crowds Are Enjoying the Services Conducted | by the Aldridges | A full ues E if the evange lists, Rev, and Mrs. Aldridge, at th ptist Church last evening when th Th lar service was opened. © ized crowd meetings. | One is conducted for young people by Mrs. Aldrid, d the other, by Rev. Aldridge, is very helpful to persons siring to know how to use the Bi soul-winning work. a y rousing h. s by the congregation under. the ! ship of Rey, Aldridge lent choir number by : the Ald nd ple chorus | good see the idyes believe in entitled, “Ma Ought to B Mrs, Aldridge prea Her subject was Else, ing her re found in Exodus 4 send, I pray thee, by th whom thou wilt send by s in a certain place in} New York state where they were called to an assistant pastorate there was a strange and malicious disease | germ inthe air. It afflicted the, rs, the deacons, the trustees, the At i on the “0 my Lord,| hand of hin She be b young people’s society, in fact, | verybody in the church seemed to have caught the infection. It was the “I Can't, Get Somebody Else” hope Bismarek people w cuse, not succumb to this disease during this upaign,” she Moses seems to have had an attack, but ith him when ve him a won he made excu: derful promi: right to with th “Little do you realize what God is able to do through you if you sur- render your life to Him,” she de- clared. Many Withhold Lives She showed how in all ages God had used the men and women who dared to trust Him and completely yielded their lives to Him, to complish the seemingly impossible. people are willing but they withhold their the Lord,” she said. “Put and you can claim His help and blessing. What right h: you to 1 upon God in trouble, when you ignore “Him in prosperity?” she said. Rev. Aldridge will pre “Trouble Makers in Bismarck. This will be an exceptionally inter- esting service to which all are in- vited. ic “Certainly 1 will be tonight Tomorrow morning Rev. Aldridge will pr i of thé cburehes in this ul ign and . AL idge in the other, At the young people of will meet in the Baptist church on Fourth street and Mrs. Aldridge will address them. Mr. Aldridge will ad- dress the Christian workers class 7:30 p.m. The subject of the eve on will be “The two Great- 5 p.m. instrumental music, “The ecial feature at both churches “be the Sunday School x. which will be sed by one of the evangelis uch school, A full attendan schools. Beginning Tuesday evening the ynion meetings will be held at the Evangelical Church until the close of the campaign. MAN WOUNDED IN ATTEMPT T0 is expected in. both AVOID ARREST Grand Forks Patrolman Sends Bullet Into Leg of Al- leged Auto Thief Grayd Forks, } Anderson Edwar Forks was shot in the leg early th morning by Patrolman Arthur Sel- berg of the Grand Forks poli partment, when he tri scape arrest for the theft of an nutomobil in which hi Martin, also of East Grand Forks, were found Martin knocked down the owner of the car who had been left by Si to watch him and made h but was later urrested He is held by the police while An derson ix in a hospital. The latter’ wound is not seriou: Foods Exposed to Ultra Violet Rays Will Cure Rickets; ac Chicago, Feb. 27.—(#)—The — sub- stance that enables certain foods when exposed to the ultra violet ray to cure rickets has been discovered. Cholesterol, a white crystalline sub- stance, is so altered by ultra violet rays or sunlight that it may be sub- stituted for the anti-rachitic vitamin in. cod -liver oil, the University of Chicago announced today ; ative ‘properties. produced in irrad ated foods are due to the presence of this cholesterol. the laboratories University of University and in England mede thi discovéry at about the same ime. Dr. J. A. Singmaster, Prominent Lutheran _ Minister, ‘Is. Dead y School teachers, the officers | a to give | a both churches | j the tax reduction effe | prosperity throughout the country. e le | oreation United Chur Born ing its anc Martin Luthe the Millersville, Pa, 2 und at. Gettysburg ce wduated from the) latte nnd from the Lutheran seminary in 1876 | In 1900 he gave up his charge in| Allentown to take a professorship in the seminary at Gettysburg, beco! ing president of the institution in 1906. or ihevlogic years Dr, Singmaster served} on the board of foreign missions of | the chureh. He was president of the! i} dof the Gettysburg hosp 4 s interested inthe “oases TOSBARCH FOR | GUNS DROPPED BY SUSPECTS Weapons May Add Link to Chain of Evidence in Mur- der of Patrolmen St. association. He was author of num-! Paul, crous articles on religious topies and! left for edited several Luth n publications.) with V: In 1877 De. Singmaster married! arrested near there Thursday, to Miss Caroline Hoopes of West Ches-| search for guns discarded by the ter. Five children survive. {men before they were arrested us = | CARROLL'S PARTY BEFORE! A GRAND JURY Medel, Alleged to Have Bath- ed in Wine, Brings Suit For $1,000 | (2) Earl is now before | ppeared before the plain what ac- happened at theatre Mond ed by the Countess of heart and many weil known person ch a nude girl is said to have bathed in ight, attend- 1 model, has hired arroll for $1.000. es she thought her ivate party, es she was m of a publicity stunt. She job in one of his produc: by The law: viewed € I on the matter. Countess Prot; The Countess of Cath the \ atre Owners of # a to bar her from films as 1 publi -made person she de: bes: as unwarranted, “I never thought of going into the films,” she said. Carroll himself has shown a taste for public C was leaving the fe we atter ssion with the grand jury, pho aphers managed to get pictures ch eaife, a friend, in- ral blows were e cramen. | LOWER TAXES MAY INCREASE PROSPERITY Coolidge Fears Deficit, How-| ever, and Urges Congress to “Be Careful” Washington, Feb. (P).--Provi- sions of the new tax reduction bill were in operation today, with presi- | dent Coolidge holdin the belief that | the measure will cause a treasury | deficit of $100,000,000 at the end of) the next fiseal year. | Further reductions may be possi-| ble within a few years as the public} debt total lowered, but in the meantime Mr. Coolidge hopes con- gress will go slowly in appro measures calling for additional ap- propriations, He has particularly in mind the proposal for increasing by | in| about 10 per cent expenditures behalf of the army and navy. The threat of a treas at the end of the next may be removed if congr ful of the government’ Coolidge thinks, and he fo t s increased ditional revenue for th Empr Gettysburg, Pa., Feb... 27)-#)— J. A. Singmaster, president of the eran Theological Seminary and of. bie most prominent ministens the United Lutheran church in e died here early today from e effects of plectic stroke Toda; L n entertainment } b; ‘£This is the Coffee We Usel™ suspects in connection with the si: -} ing of two patrolmen here Tuesd ‘0 of the three men under a t z e¢ identified yesterday by a Min- neapolis resident who said he over- ng that they nad believe the heard them killed two 1 alibre of the ay add another idence in the slaying of} natrolmen, John Schultz “and Pe boa: _Was en roule to renewe their P. Ovett and ™ questioning of S. rill E th her two members of the trio din Wisconsin, GUNS NOT ONES TO KILL PATR 1 Menomonie, Wi Feb. 27.-()— Two guns found by St. Paul police today in the fields near here are not believed to be those used by the men who killed John Schultz and Fred A. Peitsch, St. Paul patrolmen. The detectives said that a piece of the handle of one of the guns used y the slayers had been found near the scene of the murder in St. Paul. Neither gun dug out from the snow near Amy, Wi this noon has a piece m the handle. A third we which could not be found, was scribed by Virgil Ba- ker, one of three men questioned bout the slaying, as being a small German made automatic pistol. Railway Company Planning Escorted Tourist Parties Escorted parties of summer tourists through the northwest to Rainicr Na- tional park and Alaska will be oper-|“ ated this summer under railroad aus- pices, A. B. Smith, passenger traffic manager of the Northern Pacific. an- nounced today. The first of these Sta- tours will leave ‘Chicago Union tion on July 3rd at 10:35 a, m. on the Burlington route and the Northern Pacific. The second of the tours will leave Chicago at the same hour on polis, Little Falls, Wa- loorhead, Fargo, Ca: ‘ity, Jamestown, Bis- marck, Mandan, Dickinson, Glendive, Miles City, Forsyth, Billings, Living- ston, Bozeman, Butte, Missoula, Spo- kane and Portl At Portlan highway dr t morning. ¢ tourists will leave Portland at 4:30 p. m. for Tacoma, where they will stay overnight at the new Winthrop hotel. The following morning they will leave by automo- bile for Rainier National park. After a rest at Paradise Inn, the travelers will be driven in sightseeing cars to Seattle, where headquarters will be at the new Olympic hotel. mer Voyages Planned The fi of the tours will sail July 10th from Seattle at 9:00 a. m. and the second party will sail August 7th at the same hour. The steamer voy- age will be by way of Puget Sound across the Strait of Juan de Fuca into the Gulf of Georgia, thence through the narrow channels of the British Columbia inside passage to Ketchikan. ‘The travelers will see Wrangell, Cape Decision, Juneau, Cape Spencer, the Gulf of Alaska, Mt. St. Elias, Melaspina, Glacier, the Alaskan coast range of mountains, Cape Hinchinbrook, Prince William Sound, Cordova, Child's Glacier, Val- dex, Latouche, Columbia Glacier, Sew- ard and the southeastern inside pas- sage. The return trip through the north- west will be made on the Great North- crn railway. These Alaska tours will be known urlington Tou: and Mr. Smith predicts that they will be fullv as successful as the Yellowstone-Color- ado and the Yellowstone. ier es- corel tours which were operated in 925. Use Gas, the scientific fuel. In hundreds*of ? thousandsofhomes | Empress Correz | held the place of * honor this morning? ——— eaten all ess * | « A. Coffee | ‘and keeps old ones. lo the biggest cel i Peer sa perro Made in Ocr Own Mills Stone-Ordean-Wells Company | vu T # a “The House of Successes" :-|Mrs. Rebecca Wilton, No. 624 North THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE FORMER BURLEIGH COUNTY WOMAN TELLS INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT ‘LINCOLN, WHOM SHE KNEW WELL Friends of Mrs. Rebecca Wilton, better known as “Grandma” Wilton, who for 34 years lived in the Sterling and McKenzie communities, will en- joy reading an interview recently ob- ed by a Portland, Oregon, paper ing the lady's acquaintance- ith Abraham Lincoln, Wilton came to Ster- in 1885, and later moved nzie. In 1919 she went, to and, Oregon, where she has since made her home. Her son, Wil- liam Wilton, still lives at McKenzic and the following is a copy of the ar- ticle published in the Portland paper on Lincoln’s birthday, which was sent to him: n lived in Carlisle, where her husband] vate substribers among’ the’ Greck ‘manent equipment and the colony was clerk of the court and s few/| citizens. The contribution of $600 by|has deen called “The American Jun- months later they went to live with| American Juniors will be used forjior Red Cross Camp.” her parents, who occupied the old governor’s mansion across the street diagonally from the home of Abra- ham Lincoln. She was the youngest of_11 children and is the only one now living. In spite of her 86 years, Mrs. Wilton is and hearty a boasts that she has not taken a dose of medicine for more than 50 years. Junior Red Cross Members Receive Belated Present Twenty-five boxes of Corinthian dried currants have just been receiyed by members of the Junior Red Cross of the Burleigh county chapter as a Christmas gift’ from the Juniors of Greece to those of the United States. It was the desire of the Greek Jun- jors that the currants should arrive before Christmas, but unavoidable de- lays occurred. The gift is represen- tative of the exchange of Christmas gifts between the children of Amer- ica and foreign countrics as spon- sored by the Junior Red Cross, Until last. year the American Jun- iors did not have opportunity to as- sist in Greece through their national children’s fand. However, last au- tumn the Greek Red Cross requested assistance in establishing a seashore colony for 800 undernourished chil- dren inclined toward serious illness, so the “Phaleron Summer Colony” has been established, to be supported jointly by the American Junior Red Cross, the Greek pa prltetnd ae of Hy- giene, the Greek Red Cross, and pri You will be surprised at the delicious luncheons served at the McKenzie Hotel for 35 cents. ¢ my young husband riding around on a fine horse than I was. in potitical speeches, Women weren't mixed up in politics in those days.” ‘Obeyed Wife ‘The Lincolns and the Wiltons were friends of long standing. Mrs. Wil- ton’s family, the Perkinses, were friends of M y, the Todds. Dr. family physician for the Perkins family for any years. Mrs. Wilton knew Mrs, HLineotn and her three sisters, all of whom lived in Springfield. “AL those stories nbout the un- even temper of Mrs. Lincoln are true,” Mrs. Wilton. said. “She was a very pretty woman and very dressy but she could get most awful mad. Mrs, Wilton recalled Mrs. Lincoln she came down the street one day ith her long dress sweeping the sidewalk, evidently so angry she wouldn't’ bother to hold it up. One day Abraham Lincoln started down the street leading his young son, whose face was very dirty. Mrs. Lincoln shouted, “Abe Lincoln, you bring that child back and wash his face." He had not noticed that the child’s face was dirty and promptly, as was his habit when Mrs. Lincoln spoke to him, returned. Mrs, Wilton says that Abraham Lincoln was a great statesman, but not by any means a model husband. Mrs. Wilton thinks this was because his mind was always too full of the weighty matters. He was the kind of a man who would forget to split the wood or maybe to carry it in. Viewed Body “In those days,” she said, “you were not ‘in’ unless you had. race horses no more than you are ‘in’ now hwithout an automobile. My husband and Lincoln’s father had many race “NORTH DAKOTA'S STATE _ BANKS ARE IN EXCELLENT CONDITION” Said Bank Examiner Gilbert Sem- ingson in making public an abstract of the condition of all state financial institutions as of December 31. It means that PROSPERITY .and CONFIDENCE have returned to our State. “6 Though Abraham Lincoln was the “rail splitter” in his youth, when he was older and married he often used to forget to” cut the wood for the woodbox and the quick tempered wife frequently had to eall him back to the house, This fae along with many others that throw light on the life of the great emancipator sworn to by i Save and Be Prosperous. FIRST GUARANTY BANK F. A. LAHR, Pres, LAHR, V. P. mg ER, Cashier . BAKER, A. Cash. . Ivanhve street, Portland, who leaned back in her easy chair today and gave If up to recollections of the when she was a young woman in Springfield, Ti, and lived “diagon- ally across the street” from the Lin- colns. / you see,” she smiled, apolo- getical honestly, “we didn’t realize how great he was destined to become or we would have paid more attention to what he said and tried to remember the things he did. All Loved Him “Of course, everybody loved" Mr. Lincoln, It ’t make any differ- ence about politics in Springfield. 1 never heard anyone say anything| horses and it was the delight of against him. He was kind and con-| young Bob Lincoln to ride those . siderate of everybody, and—well,, horses. 1 recall very vividly the pic- everybody just loved him. Of course, he was homely. I never saw any man as homely in my life, but he was not ill-proportioned, as Ihave heard peo- ple describe him, He was well built | and his arms and legs were not out of proportion to his body. He wore good clothes, the very best of ma- terial and they were clean, But séinehow he never seemed to get into them just right. He always looked ‘as if some one had thrown them on tures of this young man perched on one of those race horses, and he could ride, too.” Mrs. Wilton remembers when the news came of Lincoln’s nomination | for president, his election, the trying times that followed and the shock to Springfield as a city when the news came of assassination. She remembers viewing the body as it lay in state during two weeks pre- ceding the funeral. She recalls the Our Shop Policy For 1926 For twelve years our shop’has.been servicing the automobiles of owners in the Bismarck territory. We He rene Tee orien, | geverauentipurcnmestetanebikifee have seen our business increase until today we-have the 5: Lincoln vas sogate day. in 1008 Ein |i She remembers’ that) wreut largest force of skilled mechanics in our history, and Fatah” et haha | Sk. Was Set born ining even during the past winter we have been unable to Te earns a re anne Teal Wiliam i Wilton ond keep up with all of the work that was offered us. | This we ~ has enabled us to keep together the fine re of me- UNCL AIMED H AIL WARRANTS FOR chanics we had last summer, and we are g! 0 Say no better men were ever employed in a Bismarck shop. We BURLEIGH COUNTY TOTAL $143.17 have developed our garage in every department to be : of service to every car owner who favors us with his ment holds unelatmed hell Indertaity | Thompaon'& Lindley, Bismarck, business, no matter whether it be mechanical, electrical, ie to-gunera'dnd wongnts whond ai-| 1948 10 Per Gent Warrants wash or storage. We have invested in costly machin- dresses haveichanged since:hallilesees| ML. Haodel ee ery, and our men have been trained to know the peculi- > ported or place of resi-| W. H. Hamm Caer 9 4 dence wascineonrectly given apathe | Mr. Aone ey ee ae arities of all makes of automobiles. Our storage cus- resent indemnity for several years in| Anna Knudson, Bismarck, N. D. 6.02 tomers know that their cars will receive proper care some counties and many of the war-| Michael B. O'Connell, Regan, 5 °. jo Fants may never be called for usless| |X. D. vs where they keep: them. Therefore at the beginning of : ment so that the management of the| Sam Plusis, Bi 3 this new driving season, we are glad to offer our good department may communicate with] Paul Noel and Fred W sy e4 e * . the interested parties. *'| Eva T. Smith : facilities to the general public as we have in the past, Unclaimed warrants fag Burleigh| A. N. Davenport, Regan, N. D. . vy : . ‘4 county amount to $14d17and if any | A. R. Ives, Hogan, Ni D, «-.; with an ironclad guarantee that the customer must be Mficreahoulh of fuel gayoenaistietn UNelaTAmMonipat? Gserieoad satisfied before he pays. the following list he should write the} Ester Weckerly, Chascley, N. D. ‘é State Hail Insurance department, Bis-| Frank Harrick . ; 4 guivece cithe party wtesaumo ap: rank & eabe, Secadell, Ba C . Ch hill M In ate such information. List of war-|¥. J. Darmody, MeClusky, N. D. ; rants for Burleigh county follow: Mrs. S. E. Evans, LaCrosse, Wis. 1926 Warrants Peter Doley and Oscar Coleman A. Thompson. and H. J. Lindlie, and A. L. Skoglund, Baldwi s Hemera ? . ae eee ng #0 PATHEX TAKE YOUR OWN ‘ MOVING PICTURES Last week we ran our first advertisement of the Pathex movie camera and projector. The. response has been remarkable. Dozens of inter-. ested people have called daily at our show room to see this wonderful little machine operate. The camera is so small it can be carried in the overcoat pocket. The projector uses electricity from the ordinary house lamp socket and throws a fine clear picture over three feet wide. The two machines list at the astonishing figure of $97.50. Remember the great French moving picture house of Pathe builds and guarantees Pathex. The film can be loaded in daylight and costs little more than pocket Kodak supplies. It will give you a history of your family that will be wonderful in future years. It will keep.your va- cation trips alive in a most vivid way. | films of every description are available at a trif-. ling cost so that you can have a regular show at home if you wish. cies We will be glad to den e at your home if-you will give us ay = no and we will even sell Pathex on an easy: payment plan with $25.00 down. : i i Will be held in the magnificent Sy NEW GYMNASIUM OF THE STATE, TRAINING SCHOOL. ALL THE NEW MODELS IN ALL THE POPULAR MAKES OF CARS, | ss A 12 Piece Orchestra will play for daicing afternoon and evening. —