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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1926 Trainmen Plan Big Picnic Next Sunday. Plans were considered and a com- mittee appointed to make arrange- ments for a picnic next Sunday at the meeting of the Traihmen’s union and the B. of R. T. Auxili last night at the K. of P. hall: ‘Abou 45 mem morning 1b o'clock at recreation park, and membera of the Bismarck lodge and their families have been ‘invited to attend. The:trainmen will remain at the park for er and supper. Each family is asked bring its own lunch basket, Ice cream, coffee and lemonede will be furniehed by the ladies auxiliary, Loveland lod, No.. 738, which | wi act as host William M. Dolan of the Bismarck 5 ided in the absence » A hundred or- more are expected to be present at ‘the picnic Sunday, according to Chris M. Fisher, secretary of the lodge. WEDS MAN FROM LAR! Miss: Tillie Durbeck, Mandan, wa: married Monday to Cecil R. New- man, of Lark, at the Lutheran_par. sonage, Bismarck. Rev. Oscar John- xon performed the ceremony. Misi Edith Taylor and Lorin Tower, re! tives of the bridegroom, attended. Miss Durbeck gtaduate nuree of the Deaconess’ hospital ana Newman is a farmer. A party fol- lowed the services, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Surface. BACK. WITH PARENTS Enos Hunke arrived Monday from Cleveland, O., and will make his home with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. Hunke, of Mandi BACK FROM FARGO Mrs, J. J. Howe and children have returned. from Fargo, where they have been visiting the |: few days. HERE FROM DICKINSON Mrs. W. Crawford and son, Wil- liam, of Dickinson, are guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Nichols. GUESTS AT THORPE HOME Mr, and Mrs. M. Kramer and Mr. and Mra. R. Kolbeck. who are visit- ing at the L. H. Connelly home, were guests of honor at a dinner Fad Mandan Ne r.| mrack with J.) in preparation for the WS fifay for their home in Milwaukes, Two Men Are Fined - For'Selling Liquor gh ogee) eae ee ace before d’ pleaded guilty George © Kuhns, Syndicate, was Judge H. L. Berry jing intoxicating to a cheat of te was sentenced ‘to six tags ie months in jail, and $200 dition to paying $100 cos released under suspended sentence on it payment. of: costs, ard on conditionjand L. B. jwith $1496.02. ruccessful-aspirant, spent only $332.65, of his good behaviour for four years. If within that time he is found guilty of violating the law again, the | 1: sentence and fine canbe invoked.|e John Brown, resident of the Syndi-|S' cate, who was atrested at the same time as Kuhns, had not yet pleaded. Valentine larcell was arrmigned with’ Kuhns and likewise pleaded guilty. He was given the same sent- ence as Kuhns atid $60 costs. Payment of cost: condition of An; violation of the prohibition law, the next four years, on his part will|© result in imposition of the fine and jail sentence. “ VES OVER TO BISMARCK * and Mrs. Frank Aughney and son William are moving to Bismarck Saturday. Mr. Aughnay has been em- loyed for some time in the offiée of ioners, Miss Hazel Chorley, employed in the office of the commission, will move to, Bis- them. She \ has heen roonting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Aughney. . BANDS REHEARSE Several members of the Bismarck ike ‘band were present last night lor rehearsal with the Mandan band joint concert |¢ to be given Thursday night in Man- dam, “under the direction of Ralph aw. ATTENDS TEACHER COLLEGE Miss Thelma Wagner, who has been | tures spending the week-end with her par- © ents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Wagner, left| A. h 0 § where shc|with a reported expenditure ‘of four last night for Valley ve is attending the State Teachers col-|cents for postage, for relection to the supfeme court bench. i Rugby, who refused to ac: A. Pansky left last night| parti for Brainerd and other Minnesota | Christi lege. LEAVES FOR MINNESOTA Mrs. W. resent the behalf of the candidates but merely their Hanna were backed ; ganizations which worked in their be- half as well as in support of oth ®ubernatorial —+ == OFFICE SEEKERS FILE EXPENSES C. P, Sténe Leads Candidates in'Toga Race—Chief Jus- tice Spent Four Cénts Four candidates for the Republ: ominations for Uni' S| tiary election spent $3,355. ments filed-at the secretary office ow. C. P, Stone, wet candidate, led st with sn expenditure of $1;500, Hanna, Fargo, was next Gerald. P. Nye, the the. 500, his hotelrand traveling Herman N. Midtbo spent jot indludin Ise Only, These figures, however, do not rep- entire amount spent on act of Expense own expenditures, Nye and campaign or- didates in thelr respective poli’ izations. Under the state law ittees and party organization: quired to report their ex The requirement is made lates. . candidates for the Republican nomination spent Me Hanley led the list totaling $416; 652.70. | J. expens ernor Sorlie spent $173 and J. A. M Govern $61.70. F, J. Graham, defeated candidate for ongress in'the second iets led in xpenditures among tl jonal = nomin: se¢ond with $1,153.98. ss spent $805 of which us a contribution to the I. V. A. fund, 1 third d Some Spendthrifts Many candidates reported expendi- f only a few dollars and some ly a few cents,.but Chief Jus . Christiansan Jed the econom He was unoppoged District Judge Pp endorsement to oppose son, volunteered a statement Points, to visit relatives and friends.|that he SHERIFF GOES TO HEBRON | Sheriff Charles McDonald went to| Li Hebron yesterday in connection with| spent cl nm some civil matters. | Thorpe and Mrs. H. H. Wil the Thorpe home. Mr. | TODAY | o—. ——___—___9 mer and Mr. and Mi (Continued from page one.) : electing a democrat in 1928, any- ow. Able scientists gathered at Oxtord discuss many things, almost as far apart as “shoes and ships and seal- ing wax, cabbages and king: They tell you that ia all Britain there are fewer that 1,000 “idle rich.” We can beat that in America, but all depends on your definition of “idle.” De- finissiens nos termes, as Voltaire oft- given Monday night by M : a ind Mrs. Kra- Kolbeck left’ hk duke, or-belted earl, pot- i himself busy ey, is av idle and worthless as one of our parasiti- cal rich, watching his money grow, and groaning over taxes. Those scientists discuss gasoline, and say it will all be An of it. Let them cheer up. Am will find a substitute for gasoline. They provided kerosene to take the place of whale oil, before’ the whale: were gone, then provided electric light before the kerosene was gone. Enrolled in some public school i: America sits the little bey that will solve the gasoline problem, in plenty of time. - Those scientists, ranging_far in the realms. of thought, tell you that rats are most intelligent animals. Of they are; it takes intelligenc or at least cunning,'to live on other: pene working or producing any- thing. te But if the rats, like human beings, could accumulate wealth and hand it on to their — Finally, scientists tell you that un- til recently, “A -common substitute for money, in Africa, was a bottle of gin.” Here, to this very day, » bottle of; gin is a common substitute for brains, and fools pay as mi wood alcohol included. Students of engineering at the uni- versity of Arkansas have set a example to the rest of the country.) under the direction: of competent scientists, they mix chlorine gas with! the atmosphere of their class reom.| Those. sixty young engineers of the sophomore class, as dy, breathe in the chlorine gas, raging six parts in one million the air breathed. This was done in “No. h as $10 for it,| Ibowoods. day about 30 feet from where he went down. The boy was an expert swim- F, mer and it is thought he was taken the water. SHERIDAN MISSIN McClusky—Charles Pickardville has been missing his farm home since 10 o'clock last $ Sunday evening and despit forts of large searching parties no trace of him has been found. Mr. Pickard had bee: his family believe that the extreme heat of the day left him in a. de- mented state that caused him to wan- der away from the farm. Every |" means is being used :to locate him. Cattle Raisers and Devil . Worshipers’ : Are Original Sheiks (#)-—Taous whom God Aug. Aleppo, S: 1 fallen ange! Malak, the with cramps while over his depth in | Votes f° ill and members of | # Demo nopposed, abor spel candidates, F. ratic senatorial nost affluent of The body was found’Mon- | °P” for ‘armer-Laborites failed to ge t their names on the ballot larding, Of the Democratic candidates, M' Litian Lillibridge spent 2 Charles K. Otto spent $10. R nd R, H. Leavitt, congtess! Bismarck Fur Co. Furs Exclusively Storage - - Repairing Vhone 610 =. 207 Fifth St. celled from ‘heaven, is the patron | =e iht of the sheikhs—not those whose andsome profiles thrown against the American screen have made flappers’ hearts flutter. The tribe of the Y: ies, worship- ers of Satan, from which the origin: sheikhs- sprang, are nomads - divi from cattle raising. They number. about 12,000 and their habitat is north of Aleppo near the Djebel Sou- mann. Another branch is to be found Khaitar, a small town in the vi- cinity of Diarkebir. race Ancontey, From Heaven Sheikhs claim they can trace their ancestry from heaven, being direct descendants of Sheik Charaf-Eddin ‘the moon.” Another early sheikh Amadin, which means “pillar supporting heaven,” while @ third ghe was directly related to th Some of the present: da: claim to have the power of miracle in rendering inoffensive the bites of snakes and scorpions. Why . Devil ‘Is Worshiped “Why do y hip the dev: asked an American who had been bit- ten by a poisonous insect, and, de- sirous of asvertaining the miraculous power of the sheikhs, had sent for or jatan is the fource of ail evil and|' if we ignore him we cannot avoid hit wrath. on the contrary isthe es- sence of kindness and therefore we have nothing to ‘the way the reply wa: Ne Divorce Among Shi vember, and, breathing in chlorine as} There is no divorcee among the real they stadied, not one of them lost ah{sheikhs, in which they differ, some- hour's work because of colds, ‘infly-| what from the American species, enza, ete. heikhs marry only the daughters : * of other sheikhy. The marriage cere- ‘olds kill millions of us every year,|,mony is very simple. It is question |: directly or indirectly, and it is safe; of mutual consent between the: bride to say that they weaken and shorten’ and the bridegroom, expressed. before the lives of 90 per cent of all human one of the old sheikhs, Bois newly. beings. ‘weds are then: branded with red ink It should be possible to find a gas,| on the shoulders and forehead, chlorine gas or some other, that, in-| The sheikh performing: the cere-| filed. filling lungs and. reapittiory| mony then takes a branch of a treo ‘apparatds, would destroy noxious'and breaking it in two, ways: “Re- germ life without injuring the main{ main united until death parts you as ormanie. us a end Noe Ad be force has broken this branch.’ stroys mo: reak: —___—_—-—— the ” ~ tL PROMPT PAYMENT WIN the hand. New York, ie 11—Prom ay~ | iment on u first order is often the first step in misleading merchants before. tl perpetrat of a commetcia! Saag Pa vg iaaes kerppetnd ger of lation ssociati WTR FeaaNDEN Fessenden~Large crowds from Fes-' port that pea resulted in tl senden and’ ne: attended tence of d. J. Rafferty to a year the’‘Luther ‘rally Sunday at the ral. pertitentia ae Ole, 8. Hovey farm, northeast’ of t's | is . A chorus of 75 voices music for the y furnished | oceasion. Gov, _A. Nestos of inet delivered me ‘a ss at the afternoon getslon. r ee H. B. LOVE D.C. PH. C. Doctor of Chiropractic. EXAMINATION FREE. Fitinge Bidg. Phone 174 OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO SALES CO., INC, S18 Moin 0. Phone (2 BISMARCK. — ae inees, spent $10'ahd $4.50, respec- tively. Many School Aspirants Ralph Ingersow ted the Farmer- Laborites in expenditures with®$9.60, all for railroad fare. Charles’ G. Johnson spent 54-cents. | There were no other Farmer-Lahor expenditures. Expenses in the campaign for super- intendents of public instruction ran higher. Miss Bertha Palmer, ne pent $210.76, and “J, By unnerup, spent $197.80, Other reported expenditures as : Crain, $130.93; Barnes, $140.- 16; Lokken, 94.95. of the detailed reports of andidates shows that fice help, 1 and donations the remai Mutchler Confers _on Proposed: Park On the H.¢A. Mutchler, Bismarck, special representative of the Northwest Nurs- ery, Valley City, met with the Park Board of the city of New Rockford and explained the proper. planting for their proposed park, last Tuesday. prepared the rough draft which he furnished the park commissioners. A blue print along-the same line will be furnished by the natsery with the order that is to be planted: this fall and will be followed by. the commis- it, travel expenditures counted for mach of printers got a considerable share, of- b Hey}, the park year by ear. The park which the, commissioners made“provision for will compare fa: sershly with any in the state, it is said. Packey McFarland . Proves High Grade Fight “Reporter” + Aug. 11—UP)—Packey Mg- Che nce the idol of the Chica Farlan wizardry to filling the ology. Packey_has been on the air, but not with one of those set speeches: “It gives me f apel Pleasure, and I am pleased,” etc. Farland, making his before the microphone, be an extraordinary high-grade re- porter. He was selected by the Ili- nois State Athletic Commission to give a blow by blow description over five radip stations on a single hook, of the lightweight championshi le between Sammy Mandell and ’ In the judgment of isteners, MeFarland was « “wow.” ways rated as one of the shar; est, shrewdest ringsters of all time, Packey's expert knowledge of boxing enabled him to give a vivid account premiere turned out to Rocky Kansas. his } Al ‘Capitol Theatre } Tonight.and Thursday with JANET GAYNOR ~ LESUE FENTON ~ CLAIRE MSDOWELL Qver the hurdles with Irish luck and love triumphant A racing drama of Evins Isle and-California' Return limit Oct. 31st. ne OW excursion fares to cities and tourist tives of the Far West ate-offered to you by Pacific: between May 15th and the. Sept. 30th. é ring invested. {t wisely. Round Trip Fares | was hi nin; » and ins! o crm that “Manel! "alinched” so Kansas clinched,” whichever dox was guilty. Moreover, McFarland didnot } his head in the cxcltentent’ of the furious exchanges, as. was the case of| broadcasters and reporters in the commbtion at the mpsey-Firpo fight when the heavyweight cham. pion was knocked out of the ring, Once a slim ted boxer of 135 = now reached unde! ly havin; ed ‘he carn dusk is ness ven. beh aliens home, added am f directors of ‘the banking institution in the city. tures in Joliet, now TIGER, TIGER! ‘ apore—Guests at a hotel in al Middletown, Ni .Yi—Her » nd sevtiement in the Federa' gave her $6 once, but that * “six States sought their rooms, )» Mrs: G. not languidly either, when a large wife of a farmer of Wall tiger walked in one day recently. Bil-[here, told the court in: te: liard players didn’t-even stop-to rack} bis. non-support. tele — Bat ve aera = es righten players and sot i 2 refuge und tal A four-fifths of the had to coax it out to sbertos. world’s supply of Until September 1st I will loan fitty, per oat of the valuation of. your. poh or: me eusce laterest) payable asmlam y able: semi- with rj PB espicdusP ng privilege. Make your application’ at once P. C. REMINGTON, City National Bank Loan in <e Bismarck The Golden Rule No. 18 Quality Merchandise For Less $4, $4.50, $5 Pumps and Oxfords, Pair, $3.45 NEW CRETONNES 50c-Cretonnes, short lengths, 3 to. 10° yds. to. piece,. light. | og patterns. Very’ spe- e MEN’S CAPS In fine grade suiting, a large variety of styles in plain and mixtures, z $1.50 special FINE OUTING FLANNEL / 27-inch Outing Flannel, plain white, pure bleached, 25c 5c N EW FALL PUMPS Ladies’ new Pumps in strap and tie, the new fall tan shades; gjso bros leather and kid."In high and low heels, alP sizes at BOYS’ BROADCLOTH SHIRTS Boys’ fine broadcloth Shirts in the new patterns, striped and checked, beautiful | as- sortment; — $ 1 .00 12 to 14% .. CHILDREN’S FALL HATS Lityle girls’ dress Hats in the ‘new shapes and colors, with latest style trimming in con- trastire colors; in velvets and felts at $1.45 8 $2.95 Guarantees Greater Value tothe Car EVERWEAR HOSE Ladies’ pure silk Hose, 260 needle knit, silk to top in 18 - new fall shades. $1.60 val- ues, spe- $1 25 cial .... WORK. GLOVES Men's good leather Work Gloves with horsehide face; $4 values, 75: c our price CHILDREN’S COVERALLS Of heavy blue denim, with .. red trimmings, sizes 24to 6 years, 95¢ 69c values Z . BS BOYS’ CORDUROY TROUSERS BURSON HOSE Ladies’ pure silk service Hose with silk to top, in all the new wanted shades. bind 1.00 MEN’S OXFORDS The “Booth” make. In the new styles in tan, brown and black; $7 and $8 values. The way we buy them priced at .. 95 MEN'S SOCKS SATISFACTION MAKE Men's fine work or dress Sox, bee bau double toc eel, 3 ee 3c value, pair BOYS’ TROUSERS FINE WOOL $3, $4 boys’ Long Trousers of fine cassimere suiti sorted, tan and gray; wi belt loops; sizes 7 to 16 special MEN’S BREECHES Men’s corduroy Breeches. In the dark drab, narrow rib corduroy, strongly made, re- inforeed seams, lace leg, Pe 3.45 pair . LINEN CRASH TOWELING Good heavy weight Toweling, special purchase of short lengths, 3 to 8 yds. to piece. 33c values, 19 c special, yd. .......... In Jong. pants styles, wide and narrow ribbed... A, few. cotton cassimere trousers in- cluded in this lot. . $2.00 and $3.00 values ......... ° BOYS’ SUITS With two pairs pants, all wool cassimere, medium and dark brown mixtures; knick- ers or long pants; sizes 6 16 years $8.75 “CREEP-A-WA” FELT SLIPPERS The comfort and beauty of a Slipper. The ‘well known Creep-a-Wa Slippers in the most beautiful shades for women and children, the , pair Buyer