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° SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1926 °° THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE , MME. SEMBRICH|OPERETTA, FEAST OF THE RED CORN,’ WILL BE - KERPSIN TOUCH) ONE OF PRINCIPAL ATTRACTIONS AT CORN SHOW One’of the principal entertainment, *This year the queen, Weeda Wanta, ini song, “I've Inherited a~Most, Pe- show at the Bismarek auditorium No-| red ear, because of her great desire echoing the and dancitig. vember 10 to #3, inclusive, will be the! to know the welfare of the kin Dancers Give Ghost Dance operetta, “The Feast of the Red| She is successful in findi “Pale Moon,” by the queeh, and ul , — “orn,” ents at! re vi js e nown, the real “daddy” ofthe North wi Commerce when tne proposition | put an engineering feat o ‘ i Opens Stadio. in New - York tie gotstticen tntlan neha! here,| serety. taker: Pigs “The Squaw" 3 is gi tatty a Rich scanereen: Dakota Cosn Show is 0. EK. Ander- | wns first presented by him, RA evar le taped iy ee inace ein 4 Six gpibes are represented in the ¢ old suiaw, played The “Sleep Song” is given by the| 8M, registrar of the United Siates had not been for the great amount of | which in turn connects with the Illi After Retiring From Grand | inciuding the Mandan, Gros Venires,| Baker, whage Indian nui 7 auieen aad the choi * land office in Bismarck, publicity given the project by the | nois river und eventually with the and Arickara from the Fort Berthold! in a ested Vales, Pudgec and Wudgee inj 1” 1911, while Mr. Anderson was Tribune, which pointed out the al Mis pi river, Opera in 1909 teaervation, the Sioux from the Stand-| spiders and green snak i“ ‘ale of the Three Bears,” telt| agent for a lumber company ai Ben- benefit such an exposition would a Phux Disposex of Sewage | : i ippewas from the Turtle Been U ire for honey, which might be/ #0", Minn., the Great Northern rail- to Bismarck and the state of Nort Engineers turned the river back- — nd one Winnebago. "and through a series of de-|iound in a certain ‘pine tree. The| Way arranged a corn show for they rata New York, Oct. 30—U». , The girls’ are in charge of C. D.'ductions, assisted by the chorus,| queen and chorus, growing impatient | state of Minnesota at St. Paul—-| materi ws still holds for Mme. Marcella - | Dickinson, superintendent of the In- traces it to Impie light, sister of the’ with the winds for lack of a sign, sing|the Gopher state’s first corn show.| discus brich the same lure it had when,| flan schoo, and Mrs. Dickinson, The /queen and prankster ‘of the tribe, the “Canoe Song,” and paddle imag-|Mr. Anderson at the time was presi- . as one of the brilliant coloratura | 0peretta is directed by Marjory B played by Lillian Peltier, whose name | inary canoes down a river, dent of the Benson Commercial club hi ivi the | Whocis assisted by Edna n the Indian tongue means Baby Impee Light tells the three children | and while holding that position ar- Sopranos she was receiving the) nq Mrs. Bruce Doyle. | Young Leaf, ito tip over their canoe, come up in| ranged for 9 Farmers’ Institute and world’s enthusiastic plaudits. . rd County Corn Show. Seon after the Her farewell performance at the . ¥ Ret ee 7 = 4 ° : =; | county show was over, it was léarn- Metropofitan Opera House, where ‘ a peg * ‘ RS ed that the Great Northern was she reigned twenty-five years, was é z ‘ = eS Per ; planning the state corn show and; in 1909. But instead of retiring to ‘ 5 ae : ot a. So ee offering . very beautiful, silver cup a life of leisure, after maki Foal | Ns <a © TRS ito the county making the best corn rances in Europe's principal c , ‘ aS a. | Sueplay at she exposities ag as ‘ Bis e |\county entered its cor: cites, she returned to New ‘York : ; — : arded the cup, which is still .in . \ Ne ‘ ; : Posserslon of the club. ee Out of the hundreds that come |#iM phe be rN ae oe 2 Anderson later moved to Bis: * n 1923 conceived the to her for training, she selects a " é 5 < ‘ , a : 3 i of muting on a corn show for few each year and works with them. % “ bes ¥ . ae = North Dakota. He interviewed form- Alma Gluck, now the wife of Zim- = = 4 b 9 rs er Governor L. B, Hanna on one of balist, the violinist, and Dusalina 3 - ees ; ¥ . $ — Giannini, the young American girl, E . ap get hd : dey F | readily agreed to present are listed among her most success- ‘ . a. | : loving cup as a prize to the c ful students, f i Stag Ss Tiere ‘ displaying the best corn at the » Mme. Sembrieh’s last performance ) at the Metropolitan was the scene . Anderson. then p of a remarkable demonstration. A ee E mw ttr to the directors of the Bis-* aor eae het patel aie | "| é ‘ ss Pees ck Associa jon of Commerce, and! heay lowers ai ts upon her. i ij ‘ rn ¥ . ‘ impressed w the bene-! Embraced Caruso At Farewell | ‘ ; sy j 2 “y : ay Lg Me fits which might accrue from such Caruso, who had made his Ameri- |, 2° ‘ X f . : : Ca a show, After conside! he plan- can debut in’ sateen, with 7 es = Noy Sa Bis. the (Aree sae wes Sete “ Mime. Sémbii im, kissed S ‘ . * if haem Mier aaa highs Sand eee ee ee . he ‘opering of the sho silver.loving cup. 6 ‘ ‘ a J M) exh) Several eth ial as the diva . ‘ Aaah ns its, more than 600 exhi ite had been was about to |} @ messenger ete Ss é 4 pur in place by 10 o'clock of the ‘ kage | aan : tae : ’ q s Fi opening day. More than $0 prizes Lenrlniges Ser < ‘ ; é 4 had been offered in the various) Mr mond studded watch and fob, a gi BR +6 es focented 46 ‘af the fC counties wl credie iNAuked why ee left te pera : : ; an. of stage at the zenith of her success, the singer said: 4 3 “It, is better that I leave now, ss ; * were a clltural lines and the growing of as the number of entertainment j credit when everyone is asking why, than Z . si s 2% . x : + featur Hundreds of people came j started. t A year after the first sh held r e ‘ te 5 : aaa 8 Milling company ersuaded t " 5 ‘ 4 ‘ é jeup was won by Sargent county. [handling eg arck— | 1 abilit > : Xs " 4 2 wre to the city to attend the show and og. bee Loi eer. aitagieadhels ee , gS: ‘ f . sPtr 4, the initial attempt at conducting a Mme. Sembrich often spe : state corn show waa successful be-{ Caruso so. She sang oppo. eight years. . In order that the show might be | which igh moar At cml bah ee sek : : : SHIM [held ut u more favorable time iti farme el io recal is - ie 7 ig ., Re ? 1 was le} 2 s & ‘ was decided to hold the second an ‘Pinence | Is was then a polished artist and his | % ae fe - a . nual show in the fall of 1 nd the vd the county com. | . H voice—it was the same golden|! 3. 40" 2h SN Mas cll A dates of November 13, 14 and 15 were !missioners of furle the | i voice that in later was to Fj chosen. js show was held in ai‘ pusiness men of Sena- | - : : make him f mn was MOF] Clara Grinell, whose Indian name is Pumpkin Flewer, and Clara Peltier, or White Star, of the Bismargk | icant stozq room in the Annex hotel /tor Olson a great deal of credit for the lyric than the heroic tenor. Indian school, are the central figures in the above picture. They take the parts of the king and queen, fr | - speaking pregram .in: the, ae istance given the oka lates : “I never at any time, when sing-| the: operetta, “The east of the Red Corn,” which is to be presented at the Bismarck Auditorium during | °7°* rium. This show was equal-! Cuting “an amproprration wach yenr t ing with Caruso, entertained the| the North Dakota State Corn Show, November 10 t. 12, inclusive. The little girl in the foreground it| Jv as successful as the previous‘one, MAMIME an appr pearls) pono ee spor vaesed ‘co wha | Impic Lights sister of the queen, played by Lillian Peltier. Her Indian name is Baby Young Leaf.| The attendance at the first show Qison for sponsoring and putting TO GET THE BEST eration on +. ¥ wt Impic Light is a “Regular Indian,” shallow water under the canoe, and|the second show was placed at 2,000. ‘unique. 5 was impressed the first ara Peltier, whose Indian name is i rding to a chorus number, but at! pretend th time I heard it, with its warmth, | Girl White takes the part of the hinted at the second annual show, how to manage it. Oh, how he |thereby won permanent possession ' pave could manage it! Story Is Unfolded | “There were times when he was! The story of the “Feast of the Red| with a high Yanre. cided to “burn her at the stake.” march, and “Song of Sorrow” by the =~. sedi . fh Bi 2 jot the Farthest North,” asking for! of the children, are picturesque nun. | barely nosed out Burléigh county for | raise money for that has, ever been petirpe tite SGitoes this call Maidens of tee Welte trite, who ones! news of the king, followed by a trio) bers. « Sli jy of eae 68 points undertaken “hore,” Mr. Anderson .o. 4 beta ir to.a seciuded spot | of tiny rerform who demand inj Following the forgiving’ of Impic| t® °8 for Burleig me | states. 3 i ielieles . a in to Ar ee teat tat it ado popes Ete al aa gees What Did impic Light Do?"| Light, the queen finda the red vor Barleigh County Wine Cap} ———— We serve the most complete meals in town at the re Fudgee ng 7 | equal to them F will give you the] tTooping into the glen, singing “Dead! The trio, wh played by| and the principals and chorus join in| The third annual show was held | 4 ‘Among the Co Marion Slater. (Windeat) Pudgee,' the finale, with the restoration of the }on November 17, 18, 19 and 20, with ' gress signal. A pressure of the hand will te ee ae story the one in! Mary Slater (Stump), and Wudgee, both, the exhibits and the ent. al id let you know I am feeling fit.’ the feast who finds'the first red ear Catherine Bailey (Fire Fly), furnish king is played by Clara ¢ tainment features at the city world And then at the critical moment } of corn expresses her dearest wish tojcomedy for the operett i is White Pumpkin Flower|torium. This show was even more would come that pressure, his voice | the ae panty an-old squaw of the! series of zs and dances. in the’ Indian tongue. The dancers| successful than the two preceding it, rising and soaring over the audi-| tribe, who call‘ upon the Four Winds! Ipiec Light, who finds a bear, | sire Mary Slater and Louise Goodrow,| and the attendance increased to sev- in those ing measures. to give a sign that the wish will bej played by Louise Goodrow, whose In-| and drummers are May Winana afti{eral thousand. A’ new sweepstakes —e Made Her t At 19 granted. [dian name is Butterfly, tells the bear,| May Mountclair. » [eup was offered by the corn show The daughter of a , musician, 4 4 Palm x Z association to take the place of the Basins Rocheseh, Nae. soos about the - values of eeatiens | “In other words, people not only tani Fils was ee 5 was playing hich \ hi wn up. Peo; - ictit -| _London.—Ci nting on the pro-|eigh county with a total score o! at the age of four. At twelve she|which\had grown up. People be- read ee a ius, aay posal of self-styled sclentists in Mose| 92. points. Sargent county, which was playing in public to aid herlouestion. There developed an in-|i"& more for background—biogra-| cow to shoot a projectile to the moon,| had twice won-the honor in previous family. She then studied under [{iitectual ferment, which still exists. (Phy, political memoirs, popular | Prof. A. W. Bickerton, astronomer,| Years, was second at the 1925 show p Stengel, whom she later married./ “people who had a devout sens | science and history. ; seve that the stunt is impossible. He] With a score of 72 points, Enimons ery A “ny f ffers th fis f: 1 -| county was third with 48 points. After teaching her all he knew, the jor religion became more religious.| “Fifteen years ago, the six best | QU°%", ‘cseape the crabitaticn ‘of the| Moften coanty fourth with 8? points fessor took his student Modernists became more modern. | sellers were confined to the serious til t hove -|and Ransom county fifth with 28 Vienna to complete her work under !international and racial problems political novel. Non-fiction vir-| fry nt sdven seller eens tke | pointe the falee nee state “thae 2 also became si icant: tually had no representation, Now | average big gun can.give a speed of | the loving cup must be won three There it was discovered she had a!” “Ave'read a half million copies of |in that list we have about fifteen | anly about one one higdcoath at shot] tales’ in eaueeession ‘te beceae the fine voice and she decided upon &|:Main Street,’ another half mi!-/ fiction titles and an equal number | rate, and the most. powerful explo-ive| permanent property ‘of any county. vocal career. The result was that lian pf Well’s ‘Outline of History’!of non-fiction. The public pays | known would give only one-tenth t ‘onsiderable credit is given the at the age of nineteen, in 1877, she | and $00,000 copies of Papini’s ‘Life |about as much for non-fiction as it | Teauired speed even if it could be| Bismarck Tribune by Mr. Anderson made hersgebut in “I Puritani.” (°F Christ’ \doge for fietion. safely use for its efforts in “selling the ide: The prima,tionna sang first in the} SA En tb Aid ila olan st ARENT By Soe United States in 1883, Now at the a" er : age of sixty-eight, she still carries Indian School Officials and Principals ‘on by teaching othe: pido asi * in Operetta a : one previously furnished by L. B. CAN'T BE DONE Hanna, and this was won by Burl- } | A Complete Line of John Deere ANNUAL STATE CORN SHOW RESULTS - Chicago River One, BY TEACHING features of the NorthDakotaStateCorn | joins the maidens, hoping to get the culiar F es The beur joins in ; 0. E. ANDERSON, U. S. LAND REGISTER | & y. ieee ot ‘howing, into. Lake Although it may not be gencrally to the directors of the Assocation “Father” of the North Dakota bits entered rep-{ with no thought of personal gai e. ers of authority along agri-' carried on by an organization known rn were on the program, and there | association, he rightly deserves much | estimated: at 1,600 while that atj through the bill giving the show } are drowned. The\Bon| Sargent county wax again declared | hropriution of $1,000, and the. busi. queen, Weeda Wanta. The girl has SancEREICH ol ae? corey Vd 5 y' 5 champion corn growing count; a * oir gene: rot » y its big body. And then, he knew | Mier voice, natural, voluminous, ma suggestion of the squaw, it is de- .of Sorrow” by the-old squaw, funeral ee i ig “4 elie NEF gen be pra in po - CHOP SUEY — CHOW MEIN Queen Weeda Wanta sings “O, Star chorus, mourning the supposed death | of the Hanna cup. Sargent county tiers * collection of the library of con-! hemisphere - PAGE TWENTY-NINE. ee the cost of glass production 75 per cent and increase volume 900 per. cent. Michigan, as a normal rive: the lake fiows into the rive This is not a phenomeno should, of nature % tne project would never have | wards so that Chicago's sewage wonld ; fr. Anderson in | not pollute the lake. As a river it sing the inception of the corn ubly has caused more grief and “The Tribune took hold of the | Cussing than any other. Chicagoans ¢ put life into it, otherwise | every on wonder what id never have beef Ns Y should MURPHY Some wo f | with a wide boulevar “The Man Who Knows fill it up, while another ‘ailing Insurance” ai the gove nt which maintains that it is navi 216 Broadway Bismarck, N. D. Phone 577 nd put in fixed bridg kes Chicago an Istand r moving west a mile, the river No. 7 j spades te know no seasons and are liable to strike anywhere.., And they aren’t like light- ning—they don’t mind striking twice in the same. town, are scores of the se every once in t pulls through carrying ight car or a shipment. of ind moves inward, halting str traffic as one bridge after ar is lifted. : : Those who wish to see fixed bfid ‘i z ‘ installed are petitioning the so: Windstorm insurance is to rule that the stream no about the cheapest pros: ris navigable, But the war! ‘ ; riment still holds that the river |[f ¢ection you can buy—and must be kept open to ship traffic i ASS DEVICE |] for “your: money, »: |] this agency today. windstorm may come tod |] morrow. NEW Pittsburgh OW FE. ANDERSON king indus- according to the claims of its in- will soon be put on the backers say it will re State Corn Show Anderson presented the idea in or and, although the show is now cial state cxposition and is North Da a State Corn Show | for his rt in) getting ity the Russell. Mil meant a pre: # county . | recognition and a biennium ances for the show the jest proposition to most reasonable prices. is the in the western Ke | and third largest in the has been carefully checked and recon- ditioned where - mecessary Assurance _.Of a Square Deai Whether you nt to buy a Used Chev- rolet or any o...er make of Used Car, you can come to our showrooms with the assurance that you will get a square deal! We value the friendship and good- will of Used Car buyers just as highly as we do that of new car buyers. We realize that if we are to be successful in business we must be a success with our customers! : Our knowledge of our depen:*- >ility on customer will is one of ~* mani reasons why we stand back o. var U Cars. Another inducement is the “O.K.” tag on the cars with which we back up our slogan—“Used Cars with an O. K. that counts!” —_- _ | Wide Price Range —Smali’ Down ' Payment—Convenient Terms . BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA _ See Classified Columns for List of 0:1. Used Cars