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\ MONDAY, MARCH 1, 1926 ANDREWS ASKS FULLSTODY OF PROHIBITION Action Must Be Taken to Quiet Public Mind, Says Enforcement Chief , Washington, March 1.-~)—Crea- tion of a commission to study the general prohibition question in all ‘its aspects was proposed today by Assistant Secretary Andraws of the treasury, in charge of dry law en- forcement. With ‘both senate and house pre- paring to take steps to inquire into conditions under prohibition, and with wet and dry organizations en- gaged in bitter controversy over it, Mr. Andrews declared he believed the ‘time had come for a thorough study of the question in its econom' cial and other phases. Unwilling to make an estimate of the various effects of the law him. self, the secretary declared that if ‘enforcement was to proceed with suc- cess. some action must be taken to quiet she public mind. * In th eenth amendment to the constitution ‘was adopted no move of a similar na- s been made by an authorized administration official, although con- gress has been asked on numerous oc- casions by various groups to order such a procedure. Business to Enforce Law Mr. Andrews emphasized that it was his business to enforce law rath- er than to judge its benefits or dis- advantages and he suggested that the study be left to a commission to be “ppointed by the president and which would have trained experts and. wide inquisitorial powers. He thought the investigations being proposed in con- gress would be helpful but believed they would result ultimately in the recommendation for appointment of a general commission to be composed of men of high standing and which would be outside of the political field. Enforcement of the law so far, he has not been a fair test of the working of prohi cannot ‘be made until a judiciary and police sufficient to carry out the law is available, Complaining against the continuous agitation against the law, the assist- ant seerctary said this was respon: ible for the social trend of drinking. He said he hoped for the time wh hostesses would apologize for s ing liquor rather than for not serving it. which latter condition, he said, now exists to a more or less degree. He added that if improvement of enforcement continues un its present basis the time soon would come when the hostess would apologize for the quality of the liquor at icast. Andrews Called as Witness The house alcoholic liquor traffic committee, which plans an inquiry of its own into conditions under pro- hibition, decided today to call Mr. Andrews as its first witness. Chair- man Hudson said the assistant secre- tary would be asked to appear at his carliest convenience, Mr. Hudson was unable to forecast the nature and scope of his comm tee’s survey. The committee will meet aguin next Monday and Mr. An- drews probebly will appear at that time, z TODAY | ° (Continued from page one) stead of one million “light years.” What of it? If Bishop Brown could sit here, ight feel his lost faith creeping back, ri The bottom of the canyon is almost | P' black and the colors are fading, as they fade from the face of an old man, But tomorrow those colors will return in all their beauty. Night does not last, the sun returns. This earth is but a grain of dust in space, if you like. But the power that can carve this canyon cut of a grain of dust could do anything, It could even carry our tiny souls safe- ly across an ethereal ocean one bil- lion light years in width if those souls were wotth carryin, Are we worth it or not? Can divine majes- ty do it? is the important question, Many wonderful things are pon this rolling earth’s surface, pyramids, sphinx, great monuments, cathedrals. Put them all down in sonie little corner at the bottom of this canyon, and you would need a telescope to find them, There are not seven won- ders of the world, or seventeen, or two, There is only one, and this is it. Come and gee. it. 4 Our feeble brains cr: son, some measuring stick. “What is it like?” we ask, Not like any- thing you ever saw, or thought, or dreamed about, And here, when you look at it, you do not know what it is like. But this may help you, Perhaps you have seen a great stadium with football playing, and 60,000 people looking on. This is a stadium, of solid, gol- den, many colo! rock, and there are about sixteen hundred million people on this earth. In this little section of the canyon, you could ar- range a stadium, supplying roomy, separate seats for h one of sixteen hundred million, and leave room, in five thousand million more. If five hundred: million of them shouted together at one side of the Arena, those on the, other side. would . Hear only a feeble murmur, if they heard anything, \ Must feeble man ¢ compari- | abase hime cringe and, say, nothing,” as the looks inte, this gui 7? not at all. He can say, ig a well known genius, “I als: i If the sixteen red millions did gather here, man, with his radio and amplifier, nacie soake it possible for one Voice to.be heard by all. And men. at this’ moment are har- nessing,. for, probe and power, the river that rushes by down os age nid is the Aig that ' canyon, and in 8 brain there is power that will Take the . river . oes wi evenhe power enough ‘even, ig such a cany at he needed another, This is a wond Hides canyon, and on as » it declares ut uses his brain. thing teful: Ppst- pa Rigg will find this canyon as tadas turn reincarnated. years. y bates ‘be a little lower, ‘reat. | years since the ecight-|* ition and a fair test! the upper rows of. seats, for) 2 so| Bilin fer hae bel power. is the property of the nation, a national park, consecrated forever. No men, no money making, no fac- tories, chimneys, smoke or machinery can vever spoil’ it. © ‘TROOPS WILL HAVE PARTIN OBSERV ANCE “(Continued from page one) |vaiver. Reserve ammunition was car- (ried by a pack, train, so far to the jrear that when its actual need was felt in the regiment’s great crisis it was ineffective. After the Sioux, outnumbering Cus- ter's command 10 to one, and armed with repeating rifles of the latest pattern, they had been acquiring from white traders, left the men of the Seventh on that fateful afternoon of June 25 and the commands of Reno and Benteen the following morning, there remained alive less than half of the regiment. With Custer fell 212,.eyery man in e companies, Reno's losses during fight in the valley, and in the jcourse of his retreat and upon the -{ hill where he fought off the Sioux lafter McDougall and Benteen joined jhim, numbered 56 dead and 59 wound- ed, of whom eight died. Custer Memorial Asked Participation of the Seventh ca‘ alry is but one of many impressive features planned for the semi. 1, U. S. Senator T. J. W w pressing a bill for an ap ation in the sum of $25,000 for permanent Custer memorial on battlefield. If iteis successful cornerstone will be laid during servance of ‘the semi-centennial. The house has passed Congressman Scott Leavitt's bill for an appropriation i the sum of $2,500 to mark the spot where, on the morning of the twenty-sixth, Benteen and Reno stood off the Sioux: It is planned to install this marker and estab spot as a national monument last of the three days’ observance of the semi-centennial. Sioux survivors of the battle and surviving members of the old Seventh iof Custer’s day will depict burial of jthe hatchet in a ceremony on the bat- tlefield. In all 2,500 Indians are ex- pected to participate in the ccremon jies and exercise: hich will consti- tute the three days’ program. Godfrey to Attend Members of three organizations of indian war veterans will attend the semi-centennial as yill General S. Godfrey, one of four surviving offi cers of the Sevel chairman of the association, which is sponsoring the observance. It is possible that the other three surviv- ing officers, General Edgerly, Colonel Varnum and Coloncl Hare, may also attend. A local committe, numbering two score of the prominent citizens of |plans for the celebration and a strong jappeal is being made to the citizens of Montana, Wyoming and the Dako- tas as well as to eastern tourists to attend. AT LEAST SIX POLAR TRIPS ARE PLANNED (Continued from page one) auspices of the French navy -depart- ment. The sledges are the design of Captain Otto Sverdrup, Norwegian seaman who piloted Nansen in the Fram on his famous drift past the North Pole, locked in polar ice. Hydroplanes also will be used. ‘A Norwegian, Licutenant Eliassen, hopes to reach’ the pole in a flying oat, starting from Nova Zembla. An expedition headed by Harrison Williams, ‘backed by the American Museum of Natural History, and George Palmer Putnam, publisher, will cruise the seas about Greenland to obtain scientific data. LANS ALL COMPLETED FOR BYRD EXPEDITION Washington, March 1.~(#)-- The Byrd expedition’s dash by air for the 'North Pole will get under way from New York late this month, with its leader, Lieut. Commander Richard E. Byrd, expecting to land his plane at the pole and be back in this country before summer ends. ‘ommander Byrd will depend on a three-engined Fokker plane to carry him over the icy wastes at the top of the earth. The shipping board steam- er Chantier will be used by the ex- pedition, which is being financed by John D. Rockefeller, Jr, Thomas F Ryan, Edsel Ford and Vincent Astor. Basing his preparations on the knowledge he gained as command of the naval section of the recent 3 Millan aretic expedition, Byrd pluns to base at King’s , Spitzbergen. In_ the event that ice prevents the ship from reaching King’s Bay, the flight for the pole “will, begin at some southerly point, . On most of the ts, Commander Byrd will. be accompanied only b: Lioyd Bennett, chief petty officer in Shecunenl alr service, who flew with ‘him while with the McMillan expedi- tion, George E. Pond and Frederick H, Becker, naval reserve lieutenants with much flying experience, are be- ing considered for the third pilot seat in the plane. TWO WOMEN WILL BE ON | MACMILLAN EXPEDITION ‘Wiscasset, Maine, March 1.—()— Two women will brave the - arctic waste. when Commander; Donald B. the ‘MacMillan heads his next expedition into. the frozen north, They are Mrs. Rawe B. Metcalf of Providence, R. I, ind Miss Maude Fisher of New York. ‘MacMillan’s objective on this voy- age, which is to start in June and last three months, is to search for Norse relics. in Labrador, Greenland ard Iecland, Rowe B. Metcalf of- Provi- dence will accompany, the explorer on an auxiliary schooner now ,bei! built at Thomaston, and Mrs. Metcalf will go with her ‘husband. Miss Fish- er, a cousin of Mr. Metcalf, plans to | make the fa as companion for Mrs, Metcalf. % | The new vessel will measure 80 feet over all and will miler in construction to MacMillan’s schooner Bowdoin, which has weathered several trips into arctic waters. |Man’s Body Found in Refrigerator ’ | KO a h, who is national | 4:30 eastern Montana, is carrying forward | 4! .|section” line nea: MURDERERS GIVE DETAILS (Continued from page one) door nor anyone else, so we opened the door and went in. A lamp was standing on the table, but it was burning low. Neither of. us had any masks on. When the old man came up from the hed he met us and Aman Horst hit him. ether he had any instrument in his hand or not, I didn’t see. Then we demanded money from him. He went and tore it out and gave it to him and then he fell over on the bed and the kero- sene lamp began burning. When he knocked it over he got the kerosene ‘all over and everything got afire, Then we left. The old man tore the money out of the black coat and he ‘gave the money to Aman Horst. We then rode down to Horst’s place and he took his horse in the barn and I left and went home. { got home about 11:45. The money was sewed up in a sack. It looke black cloth, where it was sewed in. package was about five or six inche: in circumference. I haven't got any of the money. I don’t know where it is now. All I know is that Aman Horst has got the money. I never talked with Aman Horst about we were going to divide the we never talked about goi We intended to stay_hcre.” Horst's Versia Young Horst, in telling crime, goes more into detail cerning the particulars than Stoller. Horst sa, name is Aman Horst; IT was born in Grant County, North Dakota, on April 3, 1906. I’ live with my mother and step-father in the town- ship of Carson, in Grant County, North Dakot: y father’s name was Adam Horst and he died in August, 1918. My mother lives on Section 14, fam well acquainted with William Stoller, Jr. L have known him for the last six or eight years, ‘I was to George Berreth’s place at 0 o'clock on Sun: February 2 19: there on horseback. Jr, was al with me. He had come over to ouf place between one and two o'clock on Sunday afternoo both went over to Berreth’s pl; got there about 3:00 o'clock and en we talked with Emil Berreth; con- docs and take us to a Berreth sai dance at Zacker’ 5 that he wouldn ind that he didn’t feel well. W stayed at Berreth’s place until about ‘clock and then I rode home and m Stoller, Jr., rode to his home. m Stoller’s home is 2% mil north from Berreth’s place Stoller, Jr., came back to our p! about 7:45 P. M, and we stayed home until about 9:00 night and then we both on horseback up to n't stay in town, but and then we rode r’s place. Wanted To Get Money “On Thursday night, Febru: 18th, I was in town and so was Wil liam Stoller, Jr. At that time we had a talk with’ Emil Berreth. The three of us talked together. This talk iook plate down near the Congregational church in-Carson...This was. about 11:00 o’clock at night. ler told us that old man Stoller had quite a bit of money and that he would like to get it but that he couldn't get it alone without doing any damage to him. We quit talking then he ¢ Chris Baue idn’t talk any more about it, We «idn’t decide what we i going to do, that night. atels up to Fred Stolle’ William er, Jr., said he didn't know. exactly how much money the old man had. He said the old man must have around between $3,000 and $6,000. He didn’t know whether he had it all on him or not. decide anything until Sunday night. Bill came up. We were first going to go down to Berreth’s pli We were going to get some wine down there. Bill said that he saw Albert and Henry Stoller pass the Stoller place and that we ought to co oyt there, to Fred Stoller’s place. We rode out there, | and Bill Stoller, Jr. We got out there about 9:30 P. M. We tied our horses near the w then we went to the house. Bill sa’ he knew the place and that he would take the lead in, and I should follow him. He took the lead in. was Yark when we got there. We didn't light the lamp. ‘The old man asked who it was. Bill asked him for the money. Bill said to the old man, ‘Here with the money.’ The old mag said he would give it to us and went where the coat was but didn’t give it. We didn't know where he had the money. We thought he went to get it so we stood by the door. At first he didn’t want to give it up so Bill went in and reached in there and tore his shirt open. After h tore the shirt open the old man was standing in the eorner and I hit him. That was over in the southeast cor- ner of the room. The fi: time I hit him I didn't have any instrument in my hand, I hit him twice. second time I hit. him I had a p of wood in my hand. The old n didn’t fall the first time I hit him Then when the old man fell Bill too! the money and then he choked him. The old man said he should let him go, that he would give him the money. 1 hit the old man with a piece of stove wood 12 or 16 inches long that was | lying near the stove. The old man didn’t fall till we took him down Be- hind the door. Bill -got all that money. After we were done we put the old man in, the bed and saw that he had had another pile of money on Kim. “I got thut pile. He had that money inside of the shirt. The money that Bill got was wrapped up in‘a little bundle, and I guess he had one big bundle too. Bill. went over, to the other. house and got the kero- sene can. When we. put the old man in bed Bill took a match ing Jin bed lying just he said. that the kerosene can was over in the other house and he went over and got it. After the match was lit it’ didn’t blaze up very much. We rode away from the place then. Rirst south from Stoller’s place, then we rode on the section line west ile, then we. turned south on the section line towards th Geo: Leach’ te we turned | and rode over -~ Carat Mandan |i. found sufte from a chai | Northern. : CB | Seeaiate’ eae Out to Frederick Reil Vases thee ‘his age as 43 nd bis Russia, were found on all Oe tind money jar box. 1 mt not. We put the eee elgg puts digestive organs house. OF THE CRIME * The |h we wanted him to take his Ford car’ William Stol-| met us on{ We didn't! The room j THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE going to go out to the old man Sto ler’s and Bill’s folks wouldn't let him go because the kids were alone. That was over to Jacob Stoller’s, father to Villiam Stoller, Jr. Bill Stoller asked e when I came out there on Tues- day night whether I had counted the money and I told him that I had counted it twice and that there was ja little over $2900.00 the first time Tj teounted it, and the second time counted, I’ counted it to be a jover $3300.00. Bill asked me where ‘Thad the money. I told him I had it !up in the house in the attic. He said {¢ hould just leave it u ; We intended to stay here until spring land then T intended to go down to my brother-in-law’s, Bill Haber, in Minneapolis. ey in’ the lattic and left it just as it was. I jhadn’t spent any of this money. 1 le tof the money that I had and all of jthe money that I took from Fred Stoller’s place and if Bill Stoller has any more money I don’t know any- thing about it. When house, we didn’t intend to kill the old man, but we only intended to get Jhis money, but after. we had beat jhim and throwed him.in the bed we tended to set fire to the house.” + ae | Supreme Court | Decisions From Adams County S. V. Booher, plaintiff and respond- ent, vs. Adam unty Farmers Mutu- al Fire and Lightning Insurance com- pany, a corporation, defendant and appellant. Syllabus: pr reasons state is held that the lence to support the v jury upon th in the opi ic ‘terms of a fire insurance polic Appeal from the District @eurt of Adams county, Hon. Thomas H. Pugh, judg Opinion per curiam. Affirmed. - Jacobsen & Murray, Mott, Dakota, and Paul W. Boehm, Hettin- ger, North Dakota, attorneys plaintiff and respondent. F. M. Jackson, Hettinger, North Dakota, attorney for defendant and appellant. From Benson County Chris Lamoreaux, plaintiff and re- spondent, vs. John F. Randall, as sheriff of Benson county, North Da-| kota, defendant and appellant. Syllabus: 1. In a conversion action the plaintiff is entitled to actual com- pensation for the wrong inflicted on him by the defendant—that is, he is entitled to full compensation for the injury suffered as a consequence of | i jdefendant’s tortious conduct, The clements of such injury, under the statutes of this state, are the valuc of the property at the tims Iq place of the conyersion, in so! circum: stances the highest market tween the date of the con’ the verdict, and the mon value of the time properly: in pursuit of the propertyd tion to the compensation, t! be awarded~ ¢xempla: against the wrong doer wh duct of the latter has been malicious, or fraudulent, 2. Where an office an execution, seizes “and~k grain in the shock, and # threshes and hayls it to mj plaintiff whose third party 7 rejected by the sheriff, is not entitled’ to recover the value of the threshed grain without deducting from such market value the actual and reason- able cost of threshing and hauling the commodity to market, when the officer acted in good faith, and not in an oppressive, lent disregard of the rights of t owner, In such a case, the qu i adili- pl he tion of the good faith of the tortfeasor is ordinarily for the jury. 3. The defendant in a conversion action is enttiled to prove expenses reasonable and necessarily incurred in protecting and preserving the prop- erty in controversy. _ Appeal from the district court of Benson county, Hon. A. G. Burr, judge. Opinion of the court by John- son, J. Reversed. : J. Bothne, New Rockford, N. D., and W. G. McDonald, Minnewaukan, N. D., attorneys for plaintiff and re- spondent. ‘ ‘ ‘ Sinness, Duffy & Wheeler, Devils Lake, N. D. attorneys for defendant and appella Original State of North Dakota ex rel vs. rles McDonald. Syllabus: 1, Where the school board of a common school district offers to pay 50c per day per family for transport- ing pupils who live more than 2% miles from the school, but. d not offer vehicular transporta actual carriage of, the child parent or’ guardian of. such children of schopl age is not suliject to the penalties of the compulsay ool at ‘tendance law, as defined by Chapter 206, 8. L. 1917. : Original application fdr writ of habeas corpus. Petitioner ordered released. Opinion per curiam. Nuessle, J, dissenting L, H. Connol}y, Mandan, N. D., at- torney for petit er. A F. Kelech, fitate’s attorney, Man- dan, N. D,, attorney for the defendant. f eae ee ee eee Petrolle - Wagner fight round. by round. tonight - at ‘Grand Pacific Billiard Parlor. No. telephone calls answered. } ess, Rervensuess end intense ings nd up .in the ad mn and eighties thank us for Tantac’s ondrous benefits. ‘anilac is. 9 blood, stirs up “it your.) ur down? it you teat or sleep, y¢ Map Pa weak id run- ‘ambition, _ can't there. ' I jturned over to Sheriff McDonald all; » came in there to the! thought that he was dead and we in- | 2} co North | * for]? wanton or fraudu-| the liver id in working or- i \! At The Movies i THE CAPITOL A! Christie's latest contribution to the mirth of a nation is unique be- cause of the fact that it presents to picture audiences Julian Eltinge and {Ann Pennington, two star artists of immense drawing power on the tion picture fans. “Madam Behave,” as the might indicate, is a farce in si and iely known us “a cou ‘Charley " The latter b time has gone down in screen as one df the biggest screen comedy triumphs of the decade, It made Sy Chaplin a sereen star of the fir | magnitude aid incidentally, tha ave,” which features Jul- in Eltinge, the world famed woman impersonator, and Ann Penni j foremost American jazz dancer which will be on view at the ( j theatre tonight, | virate of inter io jduced by Al Christie. PALACE—MANDAN ch comes the Palace for Tucsda; reported a great show, a weh balanced pro- gram of topnotch acts. Thelma, the singing violinist, delights her aud- nees with a program of popular and classic selections. She has @ rich soprano voice and puts her song numbers over in fine style. |“ Rer feature number is a medicy of inte ternational song hit: and Osborne, appearing in y de Lux do a little of cluding singing, piano, harp and zither. an act of variety put on with Maurice La Ma’ Brevities of 192 sented by two men and three Thi a very fine dance et medy dan Gear are two men ng and talking en- al and Labor,” Their will keep the house in f laughter. expert comedy gymnasts 1 their act “Fun on the Hick- and their 1 round of af j settin, presenti | titled night Li as the title suggests. and Wanda Hawley player Gaston Glass are featured ELTINGE THEATRE The amazing story of a bank clerk who is suddenly transformel i great film lover by the industry press agent is told in “Blucbe: Seven Wives,” the feature at the El- tinge today and tomorrow. Out of work, the poor bank clerk i ses a moustache, And begin. He wants ‘a waitress and the pr agent obliges him to wed seven other wemen—making him a full-fledged mn Bluebeard. \ humorous _ res of plications are inyitingly set forth “Bluebeard’s Seven Wives.” Ben en in the role of the new ii le Lois Wilson appe: 4 Mary Kel these Blanche ‘tant role-in tke film, as do Sam the pro- #.@ Brief Opposing "Lake Drainage Case Washington, March 1. -(®) ‘other brief in the long list of such Idocuments growing out of the Chicago lake drainage case was filed in the supreme court today by the attorney VAUDEVILLE TUESDAY MATINEE and EVENI PALACE THEATRE - MANDAN Reports on This Show Are Excellent—Den’t Miss. It Special Bus Leaves Bismarck 7:30 Leaves Mandan 11:15 FEATURE PICTURE Gaston Glass and Wanda Hawley —in— “THE MIDNIGHT LIMITED” Thelma “The Singing Violinist” Barry & Osborne In “Variety De Luxe” Maurice La Mar & Company In “Brevities of 1926” Kern & Gear In“Capital and Labor” Cherry & Malone In “Fun.on the Hickory Sticks” bi , MATINEE AT 4 10 and 40 cents VENING 7:15 & 9:20 All Seats 50 stage, and popular favorites of mo-j name; “ibe stl Cherry and | An- ' ' « | Ohio and Pennsylvania, | It opposed a motion of the state of } lilinois and the Chicago Sanitary Dis- trict, which had urged the court to dismiss a suit brought to diversion of water from Lake Michi- gan. The four attorneys general as- serted that while neither Illinois nor the United States could legally auth- orize the diversion of water from the Great Lakes to another water shed they only asked that restricted to the ac- for navigation through kes to the gulf waterway. insisted that 500 ¢ and that it would ne to divert more than feet per second for any ration of the sanit: Much of the brief was given over to the support of the contention that the case should be considered and decided by the court on its- merits. Petrolle - Wagner fight jround by round tonight at Grand Pacific Billiard Parlor. |No telephone calls answered. 4 VAPO CARPET AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS Miles Rolfe, Proprietor Carpets Cleaned, Repaired and Dyed. We make padded mats Bismarck Phone 398 | “This is the Coffee We Use! 'T OVERLOOK A GOOD THING m Jas, Edwards, Montgomery, comes this letter containing a valuable sugg new man since ig EY AND TAR. Can slecp all night, soreness in my chest is gone, so is the bad cough. My whole fam- | ily use it for coughs, colds and croup, and it always helps.” Stops! tickling throat, nervous hacking, soothing healing coating inflamed throat. Don’t overlook “OLEY'S HON AND PAR. ~-Adv. | MANDAN NEWS Clifford Hamel, salesman for Western Auto company 3 units to his credit, leads in the entire northern part of the United from Maine to Oregon in the ary 1 to March 31 contest of men. Gilbert Stew Mrs. W. G. Stew Friday afternoon when the chair on which he about to sil, was moved and he fell to the floor, strik- | ing the back of his head against the jedge of the chair seat. for rugs and lincleums. Mandan Prone 361 In’ hundreds of thousands of homes Empress Corres honor this morning: °° Empress S Today Empress is the biggest selling high quality coffee through. © out the great Northwest. Its delicious sexes of flavor and aroma and its unvarying quality have made Empress the one best coffee to tie to, for both consumers and dealers, Made in Ocr Own Mills n-Wells Company Stone-Ordea D UL “The House of fee wins new : friends ‘and keeps old ones. Empress Coffee is delicious in flavor and unfailingly uniform in quality. U T H of Successes"” AL CHRISTIE ELTINGE ANN PENNINGTO Directed by Scott Sidney presents N Fun, Fast and Furious. There’s a laugh in every scene of this delightful comedy Capitol Theatre bse IGHT AND TUESDAY Se ‘PAGE HREE |Do. You Want Better ‘Tailoring For Less Money Come in and talk it over. Dorum Tailoring First Guaranty Bank Bldg. DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Consulation Free Lucas Blk. Bismarck, OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO (= Om) aN vital messages to husbands and wives—isindelibly pictured in WARNER BROS. ercat screen drama WH WANTED Torn by conflict- ing passions of love, duty and her son's honor, she crucifies herself on the cross of scan- dal, while the hus- band misjudges the world loses faith, “The Wife Who Wasn't Wanted” isa ul new Warner Classic, it in every