The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 20, 1926, Page 2

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PAINTED WOODS Lawrence Johnson was a caller at) Henry Johnson's Tuesday afternon. Mr. and Mrs. 'T. Taylor were guests at Gunder Hagan's Wednesday even- ing. Dave Dixon chusiness: caller Miss Hazel n days with her cousin, Anstrom. E s spent Tuesday with Ww and son Earl were rson visited a few Miss May dd and family visited Sunday. Brown visited at | nts, Mr. and Mrs. . Win. Brown and son, J. Cleveland's Sun at in ying ‘on's assisting : r new daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Graham and Hagen of W Hagen home § nd family ut Walter W. Brooks, visited Sunday with nce Brooks and fam ar O'Brien's lake. Brooks a pied them home for a short v Painted Woods ball sina spent John m de. game last “ as played on ited Woods ball diamond P. Cleveland and son Ernest nd Jake Burke, motored to Wash. burn Friday. ation class will be held |X church Sunday aft- Hanson of eland stayed all night ve Dixon's Friday night. Peterson and his son, Ed rson, returned last Wednsday | w England and other places | they have been on a motor and Mrs. M. G. Hagen and . Miss Mina Hagen, motored to « Saturday morning to spend the 2 Viola Hagen. * Mr. and Mrs, je Harvey and family Wing spent Tuesday even } nd Mrs. Walter Stark's. Mr. and Mrs, Harvey were trying out heir new Chevrolet sedan just pur- at Baldwin Monday. |- Washburn |; { } (By Charles P. Stewart) : Washington, July 19—Prohibition referendums, or what virtually will amount to referendums, are prom! on a state-wide scale in 18 states next November's election. ‘ ‘They already are definitely aasur- ed in New York, Wisconsin, Colorado, Montana and Nevada. -In New York and Wisconsin they were provided for by legislative en- ‘olorado, Montana and «ia the petition method was u Missouri a referendum peti ated now. In C 4 prospect that ‘the legislature will follow the example of New York’s and Wisconsin's. Dry Issue Uppermost In Ohio Atlee Pomerene, wet Demo- crat, is fighting Florence Allen, dry Democrat, and Frank B. Willis, dry Republican, for the United States senate, pfincipally on the prohibition issue. The vote will be the equivalent, of a referendum, though not explicitly under that name. The same thing is true of Illinois, where George Bi wet Democrat, will make his senatorial fi inst Frank Smith, Re) the issue of modi: here law. fornia there i: son Glanville, Harry - Ulfers, auville and Larry Jonns were ~¢ Bert Glanville repair his windmill Wednesday and Thursday. . W. H, Stark entertained the ies Aid from Wing Thursday. were quite a few in attendance. delicious lunch was served by and daughter Myrtle vodrich stayed Saturday night at Mr. and Mrs, Ed, Pond’s, They he way to Bismarck where expected to leave on the ickinson to attend sum- and Mrs. Ben Klagenburg and n spent the week-end at the e home, Ben is overhauling cars. He overhauled Elmer um's Saturday. Mr. and Mrs, Ulfers attend- ed_prayer services Friday evening. > Elmer Drum was a business caller in Wing Saturda: and and motored up near Goodrich Sunday to visi Mrs. Drum’s sister, Mra. Sneider. Ed. Smith motored to Wilton Sat- urday to take Marshel Bly home. _.. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wilkinson and littls son of Minot and Mr, and Mrs. Heward Glanville and ss Bernice and Mrs. A. Wilkinson were enter- tained at Sunday dinner by Mr. and Mrs. Bert Glanville. FRANCES =. Mr. and Mrs, Herman Gierke and Mr. and Mrs. Tebbo Harms drove up north of Wilton Sunday to h 2Mr. and Mrs. Molendorf, The M lendorfs used to live here in Frances township. Bill Wachel, Mino T. Harms, Ed. Boren and 2 couple of other gentle- men who left for Kansas some time 0 work in the harvest fields down there, returned home a few days ago, having finished up the job, “They report good crops where, they an Gierke and Mrs, Lundin ipping their sheep this past Irvin Lundin drove to McKenzie a few days ago. The school board of Frances were i ion Tuesday to compare the and treasurer's records, They “found everything 0. K. John and Ed. Boren and_ Bill Wachel were calling on Mino Harms ‘Wednesday. Most of the farmers are out in the hay fields these nice cool days, try- oing to get their winter’s supply of feed. Quite a few of the youn, attended the dance at the Dietzman plage Saturday evening. They re- pat a big crowd. Mr. and Mrs. H. Gierke and duugh- ters, Agnes and Bernice, were to the iver Sunday to pick berries. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Gierke were vis- iting with Mr. and Mrs. T. Harms Sunday. Senus and Vina Harms called at the Lundin home Sunday evening. _ The coldest tempernture un record =--500 degrees below freezing point. Fahrenheit, was registerea recently scientific laboratory. people candal n may him a good many wet votes to William B. Wilson, dry Democrat. so that the issue in the Keystone State is not quite clean cut. In Massachusetts, if as expected, States in which feferendums or clear-cut -wet- and dry-- political contests this fall will give a test of the extent of sae premib ition , sentiment, fy eee follows in the tion, poll ‘conducted last Pie a by Me cet service: ir ‘For Prohi- ‘Re- "bition Calif. .... 28,672 Colorado Conn. .. Delaware Mlinois .. Maryland Mass, Missouri Montana Nevada .. New H. New Jer'y New York hio .. 3 Wisconsin 9,825 Devid I. Walsh opposes Senator Wil- liam M. Butler, the Republican can- didate for another term, he will do so, among other things, as a wet Dem- ocrat, In New Hampshire, if Senator George H. Moses is returned, it will Republican. Alwaya Wet New Jersey, Delaware, Connecticut and Rhode Island, in their Congres- NORTH DAKOTA HAD 4,377 MARRIAGES, ‘.|died at Washington, D. ©., July 20—The Department of Commerce announces that, rding to the returns receiv- ed, there were 4,377 marriages per- formed in North Dakota during the year 1926, compared with 3,707 in 1924, representing an increase ef 670, | ot 81.1 per cent. ' During the year 1925 there were, 439 divorces granted in the state, as | compared with 377 in 1924, repre- senting an increase of 62, or 16.4 per | cent. According to the. state census, the population of North Dakota in 1926 | was 641,192, and the estimated popu- lation on July, 1, 1924, was 642,004. On the basis of these figures, the number of marriages per 1,000 of the population was 6.8 in 1925 as against vorees per 1,000 of the population! County 1925 Total number Number per lation Number by ¢ Adams Barnes Benson Billings Bottineau Bowman .. Burke Burleigh Cass Cavalier Dickey .. Divide .. Dunn Eddy +e Fmmons Foster ......., Golden Valley Grand Forks ... Grant .... Griggs _ Hettinger Kidder Lamente In... Mellen Melntosh MeKenzie 1,000 of popu- nties: Mountrail ..- Nelson . Oliver ... Pembina Pierce Ramsey Ransom Stutsman Towner . ‘Trail . Culver City, Cal, duly 20—)— Most every woman has.one piece of| Jewelry that is ti Marriages 19 4a Marriages in Burleigh county during 1925, according to a re- port just furnished by the de- partment of commerce, number- ed 60 more than in, 1924, while divorces for 1925 in this county nuntbered only two more than in 1924. The totals are: Marriages, 1925, 165; 1924, 105, Divorces, 1926, 28; 1924, 27. was 0.68 in 1926, as against 0.59 ii 1924. The number of marriages was fur- nished. by the state department of public health and the number of di- vorces by the clerk of the disrict " court of each county. The figures for 5.8 in 1924; and the number of di- | 1925, which are preliminary and sub. ject to correction, follow: Divorces 24 1925 8,707 439 58 0.68 377 0.59 rrr) or Benno reerte woo 2SEr8e 2 wroretnancanont Seuuwe Serenece a 2 fom OS aatemcem OR HOSOI ate Km sesckseses * WRI TOA PION Sebsegskieese ost ‘miniature crown made. inte is. ap u be as a wet as well as a conservative | SRuaw woe | Bahanwsnwae rece i za STATES WILL VOTE ON DRY ISSUE IN ONE WAY OR ANOTHER AT The 18 states ehaded in black 4ft&ix-map will reveal thet. prohibition sentiment:this‘fall, either by referen-| « . ee dams-oF BY political fights in whieh the wet and dry issue ix-clear fr ta | ! sional representation, always are Wet, but the prohibition issue will figure jas usual in the coming campaign, | with all of them, and the test will, at any. rate, determine the present i extent of their wetnes: Maryland, also always wet, will be tevealed as oath 4 grown still wetter if it nominates the very wet Repre- {sentative John Philip Hill for the Senate, on the Republican ticket, in preference to Senator O. E. Weller, whose wet-and-dry views are some- what difficult to ascertain exactly. Finally, there is an independent wet indjdate for governor in Oregon. ho Congressional Fights ~ Besides state-wide prohibition ref- erendums, or contests which will give substantially the same information as would be given by referendums, the wet-and-dry issue will figure in num- erous and widely scattered Congres- sional district fights. Representative William D. Upshaw, for example, will have a wet candi- date opposing him in his Georgia di: trict. There will be wet and dry candida- cies in the Fort Worth (Tex.) and the Fort Wayne, (Ind.) districts, Wet and drys will vote it out in the New Or- leans district in Lodisiana. jof a prospective wet Congre: j candidate or two come, of all places, from Kansas. The district contests will not signify much. _ Neverthel wil count in determining the wetness o: dryness of the next House of Repre- sentatives. iMrs. F. S. Morey of Tenth Street Dies Mrs. F. S. Morey, 630 Tenth street, #20 last night at her home, aged 70 years. She had been ill for some time, and became worse about January 1. She suffered with hard- ¢—_—__ —___—_—____—__--¢ f | Movie Sidelights || ———— ” (By'the Associated Press) \ Milton Sills is a mannish specimen whom advocates of a fruit diet might uphold—if his other foods were taken | tingly. Lunch at three p. m.) the day was-comnosed of @ dish of! a double purpose—they smacked also} of @ taste of wine. | — ibs And now a mouse has been added to; ~~ the Universal payroll. When Jack! Leonard found @ new type of mou that would react to training, the come- dian taught it tricks. Becoming ¢ffi-, cient, the company used fhe mouse in) } some scenes and in nine days it was | figured to have been worth $90. Jack | | pockets the money. | | Moustaches are receivine much jtention at Pafamount studios. Nam Powell, the villian in one film,| ‘has considerable action built around | his love of a moustache. In the end,| jhe is supposed to lose half of it ina scene with Renee Adoree. Monjou not only ins his mou ERE PE TT REE | © | LittleJoe | 1S ALLRIGUT To Jockey AROUND— ON & HORSE am \ backed horse may be used for almost {tache in ‘his picture, but is growing any comedy situation. the final scenes.’ a mouStache un-) the title role in| ja, Van. Dyke fo | Ricardo Cortex thi jder cultivation ) “Captain Sazarac. | Tom Meighan needed a mountain, | deep ravine and a bridge for one of his scenes. He had them built after) a place near Bear Mounain, a few) niles from New York, was found un- suitable. From a photograph engi-| | neers, ists, carpenters and masons | reproduced a scene on a studio lot so realistic it is difficult to distinguish t from the natural | Get_me," saya the director easual.| y, “a locomotive of the type in use during the Civil war and have it here by tomorrow.” The loci grunts a “yes” and next day the en- gine # on hand. Such an assign- |i ment ix all in the day's Work. One| jocation man in a New York studio | |has heen in eevry state and many countries abroad in the course of his | work. | King Baggot, Metro- Goldwyn- | Mayer director, offers these observa-| | tions in film psychology: at ‘A pet skunk is riotously funny in pictures, while a rabibt is not even! ely 80. | mevettences will not stand for tricks from a Shetland pony, yet a sway- ——————SS—————— | Instant Relief From Bunions - - Soft Corns | No sensible pe will continue to | s|suffer from those intense, agonizing, | throbbing bunion pains when the new | powerful penetrating yet harmless | antiseptic Ei Id Oil’ can readily be | obtained at any well stocked drug | store. * k Apply a few drops over the in- | flamed swollen joint and see how | speedily the pain disappears. A few | more applications and the swollen | joint is reduced to normal. | So marvelously powerful is Fi Id | Oil that soft corns seem to s! vivel | right up and drop off. \ All druggists guarantee it and are | dispensing it to many foot cman dv. | ening of the arteries and had had two \paralytic strokes. Besides her husband, M. survived by two brothes Twin Valley, Min jorway, and two si Morey Ben and ters. Lee, St. Paul, and Mr: M Laura Dahl, Tacoma, Washington. Presbyterian church at 2:30 Thurs- day afternoon, the Rev. Paul in| Wright officiating. Interment will be at Fairview cemetery. Mrs. Morey had lived 56 years in this reve paving cone here ey age of 14. She had been married 11 years, during which time she ued in Bismarck. E Mrs. Morey’s sister fron St. Paul is expected to arrive tonight. THIS TOWN HASN'T ANY TAX BILLS. St. Louis—There jis one town in Missouri without. crime, courts or taxes, where rentals of business prop- erty are a fourth of what larger communities pay. ‘he town is Delbridge, Washington. county, which points to its system @ success after a year of experiment, Charles L. Delbridge owns the town and is father of the idea. He runs the town a trus Expenses are there are no police or municipal of- ficials. All publie services are fur- nished at cost. ———., CITATION MBARING PETITION TQ ESTABLISH THE RIGHT OF HEIASHD! en State of North Dakota, County of | Burleigh. * In County Court, before Hon. 1. C. Davies, Judge. In the matter of the: estate of Wilh A._Stiles, Deceased. Aaron K. Stiles, Petitioner, Mary. Robert Stiles Davis and all other perscns: unknown claiming entate. of interest. in or lien or in- cumbrance upon. the property de- scribed in the petition or peninae sald deceased, © “ Respondents, The Atate of North Dakota to the Above Named Respondent: You and each of you are hereby cited and requii te anpear hefore the County Court of .the y of By lal naa erate, at the office ‘ounty Judge, County, the Court Houke Yn the City of the 19th da: August, A. D. cause, if any you have, why the petition of Aaron K. Stilen that the abové entitled court iaue its de. cree. determining the ‘ri cension to alt of the al parties to the real property describ- is ee to-wit: An undivided net to the North Half (N 1-2) of the South- west Quarter (8,.W. 1-4)-of Rection epee ab); ‘he Went o v oy, BI Rect! Tr eent interest in and Seventeen | (17); Lot ); Elght (8), Nine (9); Ten Twelve {38} ven (21) an ineteen (19); the North ter (N. W. 1-4) of Se: et ‘a Scuth ion Twenty- Org Halt (8. 13 | or Mes bh ui aectpy Trent the Southeast if $34) of" 1); the Nor We 174) of i Sect! : By HEA AL ‘FEW HOURS FROM Funeral services will be at he | Diered in good positions on their 8. sent to Standard Oil Co. ; N. Ven- tee. ' eliminated since Hale (W 1-2) | LEARN TO EARN Four students from Dakota Bus- | iness College, Fargo, were recently | ion day. F. B. Green was; Nerstrom to-N. P. R. R. Co.; Geneva Westgard to the Williston Herald; O. Hovet to Home Machine Co., Rosholt, S. D. Employers prefer ““Dakotans.’? | They begin work with experience— have had actual business training. (Copyrighted—unobtainable _ else- where.) Watch each week. ‘‘Fol- low the Succe$$ful.’” August term saves time. Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo. NQ TO-NIGHT. va. R. Stiles, Katherine Baker, | any 4 Bismarck, in sald County and State, q ‘Ducks “and goats sugg’st comedy, { CRUSH . ithe Matinee Daily reel comedy daily sion—-10-200e; 10-25 Standard Prices REX + Theatre TONIGHT ONLY Special | Sweden and its folk, featured an seencs of its industrial progress —Also— 2 piano aceordionists sup- perti feature—Mr. Hjal- mer Isiy and Miss Cura Rangquirt. . No change in price ————_$_———— > Tomorrow DICK HATTEN and Star Horse in ~ A Roaring Western THAT PICNIC LUNCH - Because of ! d baby chicks create a SORIRDEAT Smabpee — Even David Wark Griffith, who stresses long rehearsals, eometimes exercises'a time limit, He devoted an hour to two boy extras whose task was to steal apples. Then he decided j they could not steal and run like he wanted, He ren et two of es camera boys. They went throu; action once and wi bps inPinrd “shot” in th ished see | Pb tbatitl <e i GIVES FRANCE PAINTING | Paris—A painting, 42 by 16 1-2 feet, showing the mobilzation scenes at a railway station in August, 1914, has been presented to France by the American artist Albert Herter. It was presented as a war memorial in memory of his son who was killed |in Belleau Wood in 1918. jesburg; sing to ewer 6 struck by conscious into the unfilled grave. was revived by falling rain. A junk déaler in Stockholm has bought 80 tons of wartime coins. The government minted §! 180. in small iron pieces during a of sopper. The world's’ wool erdp is five times ‘ than it was 100 years ago ara hs cotton output has multiplied 20 times. — Two Greek philosophess tthe atomic theory of matter before Chirst. jortage * roposed years Come Out of the Kitchen! * Grandmother might have been shocked by such a suggestion, for she was “kitchen-minded” from necessity. ;: For some years, Swift &Company, however, has been working to relieve the modern house- wife of continuous kitchen work. Now, in addi- tion to the many less expensive cuts adaptable to steam pressure and fireless cooker preparation, the housewife has the aervice of cooked meats. “ -to-serve” meats are now avail- able everywhere, for Swift & Company's nation- wide channels of distribution offer prompt and direct service to retailers. These meats, in great variety and delightfully appetizing, have revolutionized the work of tac housewife, especially during the hot summer months. : Such products as: are available throughout the yeer. This is ordinary meals. , summer days. ALMOST wnrrnencon es ercenereee meme you may be— bank. with Travelers another feature of “Swift Service” — and a timely use of them will vary the monotony of There is a “ready-to-serve” meat for every taste—a score or more of meat delicacies for hot Swift & Company —. Premium Franhfurts! Aisne‘ neady to sone aed wry ned est The Travelera Cheques which turn into: ready money whenever _ neces- sary, no matter how far from home +but which keep your money as safé as a strong vault! : you travel, stock up Cheques at this

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