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PACETWO BERTHA KALICH 10 COME HERE NEXT TUESDAY] 1 Famous Actress to Be Seen at Auditorium in Hermann | Sudermann’s ‘Magda’ NORTH Residents of North Dako.a should buy North Dakota manufactured und jobbed goods, W. A. Donnelly, former secretary of the North Dakota Retail Merchants Association and a former Bismarck resident, declares, North Dakota is fast becoming its own jobbing and manufacturing cen- ter because of lower freight rates and) quicker service, Mr, Donnelly asset.s. He visited in Bismarck a short time ago and declares that he has found new conditions in the jobbing and} manufacturing lines at Bismarck and Praised as a reineart old theater and as the real acting, Bertha nin Hermann Sundemann’s “Mag- a city auditorium here 7. For 20 odd years en one of the fore. | es of the nation, and her one of her great-| | ation of the juvenation alich ll be ck has two of the best equipped grocery houses in our aid Mr. Donnelly. “In addi- 5 has two fine fruit houses and two up-to-date bottling; works in addition to a candy factory akeries equipped to handle a * Sundermann treated! jarge volume of business. The Bark- late nineties in the! er Baking company is one of the He laid bare the! plants of its kind which keeps back d daughter. Magda| eastern competition narrow, provincial Mandan Advancing “Mandan across the river has come to the front with lexps and bounds in the jobbing business in the past ten years, They have an up-to-the-min- ute grocery house and the bakery business is fast keeping the other fellow at home. Their products are shipped all over the Slope country. “The pop factory ulso has grown rapidly and few soft drinks should be shipped into the western part :of | our state.” Praise for the cracker manufaetur! ing plant at Fargo wus voiced by Mr.| Donneliy, who said that few retailers | outside of Fargo know how greatly Th “N the P¥ussian empire » whe father too provd to forgive. She meets a jilted we art who has remained true to end who aids her in exposing a tite and cowardly lover who is father of her child. But she net com back repentant or nieckering. She is triumphant a ‘ a recognized singer. rries the id of the outer ush and conflict with the ler zone-—and there the of aid to “Magda” Mme. ve the best ve- DAKOTANS SHOULD BO@ST HOME PRODUCTS, SAYS DONNELLY) PLANS TO MAKE sue *, | ‘They produce the finest quatity of | Dakota wheat to be bad in any state; 4 t of the Union,” he said. | Mr. Donnéliy declares that it is the retailer's duty as a taxpayer and citi- zen to boost goods jobbed in No! Dakota first, last and ali the t:me, ty and price considered. i “Few housewives stop to ask for, North Dukota products in the manu-; st, Paul, Nov. 30-—-~#)—With the factured line,” said Mr. Donneliy.! transfer of a dozen federal prohibi- “They generally ask for ‘a can of to-ition agents’ from the Twin Cities to matoes’ or whatever they may need; Duluth and the Canadian border, instead of asking for one of.eur own' General Walter F. Rhinow, north- Jobbing house brands which car be! west prohibition director, ‘today mob- bought for the same price. ‘ilized his forees to halt the flow «< ‘ tillicit holiday liquor at its source. Campaign Suggested fie’ plane -of ‘the (prekibitien de “A campaign to urge people to pai- ipartment t ke the ing: Christ- ronize our own: jobbers, tmanufactur-| POTEMERt Oe ae oa dry imelude: " tmas ‘and New Year’s dry include: ers and retailers will be a great heip; Building up of a force of 80 eom- not alone tothe hduses doing a job- |, ; ; : »- | bined prohibition and customs ageni::! bing and manufacturing business in’, be stationed at all ports of en- the state but it will serve to help kill ify “from the Montana. line tothe the mail order game and assist all Chincula-of upper Michigan. lines-of business to grow bigger with" Detailing ef dgents to watch the the people. ‘lake Superior ports of Duluth, Su- “We grow the finest wheatin the: porior.and Duluth Harbor for-report« world and at the State Corn Show 4° smuggling. here I learned: that we are ‘fast be-| Detailing af agents to watch loncly coming corn growers, as J. M. Devine, roads, equipped with rifles and high commissioner of ‘immigration, puts-it.' )gwered automobiles. North Dakota’s corn is hdrder'and,’ instructions to agents now sta- better than “that whieh iie:grown in ‘tioned: at various border points to Dozen Federal Aconts Trans- ferred From Twin Cities to Canadian Border jSt. Paul for raids here. many other‘states-of the Umies. We |}. ready for entergency calle: leaped from the 28th atate invpoint,. Smaxgling Being “Attempted | of corm prodaction in 1014 torthe 18th) “phere have sbeen “reports. trick-| state. ‘Hing stav¢al this ‘office ‘that attempts | “Let's all pull together in the next wii] she mzie to provide plenty of| ear and see if we cannot rank among 'iiquor fpr ‘the holiday the most loyal people in the Union to \Rhinow said in announcing his) this plant has grown in the past five or ten year, "at its pre- open- tour, dramatic critic for the has for many act- ing seen them just what they from be No one the soul than a character, Drake University Eleven Will Play Gophers in 1927 \ Minneapolis, Nov. 30.—(®)—Drake | University, one of the leading elevens | in the Missouri valley, has heen sign-! on November | 12, 1927, it was announced here today. Fred Luehring, athletic director,| closed the deal today over long dis tance telephone and exp. plete the Gopher schedule day or so, The only remaining date on the Gopher program for next year is that of October 8 The signing of Drake will give the Gophers a hard game on the week before they oppose Michigan and close the season. Grafton Girl Wins Two First Places Fargo, N. D., Nov. 30e—-()—Mabel | Graving, member of the boys’ and! girls’ club of Grafton, N. D., won two} first places at the national elub con- | gress being held in Chicago in con-!| nection with the international live-| stock show, according to word receiv- ed here by H. E. Rilling, director of club work. Miss Graving won first place in clothing judging and in bread judg- ing. Jeanette Rye, team mate of Miss! Graving, from Grafton, won third place in bread judging. og | AT THE MOVIES || oe ELTINGE THEATRE “Everybody’s Acting,” featuring Betty Bronson, Ford Sterling, Louise | Dresser, Lawrence Ray, Henry Walt- hail and Raymond Hitehcock, which arrives at the Eltinge for Wednesday | and Thursday is a dramatic tale well! flavored with comedy touches. | The story, starts at a time when) the leading lady of a theatrical stock company disappears, leaving an fant daughter, and follows the child through life with its five adopted} guardians. | “Betty Bronson hasy’t had a role| since the never-to-be-forgotten “Pet-| er Pan” which can compare with her present part as Doris Poole. First seen at the age of eight, Miss Bron- son actually has the spectator grow up with her till she reaches beautiful young womanhood. Ford Sterling appears at his fun- iniest as one of Betty’s “father: Louise Dresser, distinguished char- acter actress, as an example of the successful career-seeking woman, will not disappoint her many admirers. Raymond Hitchcock gives a good ac- count of himself in his return to the silver sereea, Henry B. Walthall, the “little colonel” of “The Birth of a Nation,” needs no introduction, nor does Gloria Swanson’s former leading. man, Lawrence Gray. John L. Dal; Washington F a vehicle Without ha ossible to but thi d, in all since! maeesniy havo ed to meet Minnesot y in general this “All other le this is the sort re that once made the thing revered. In_ the an actress like Bertha becomes a living, ure in whose life sand hears must, overwhelmingly in- Kalich, athing: 'yone of the play other rked that the story Is the feminine ¢ audience to an extent sakes them in part overlook the nting creations worn by Mme. h. Bertha Kalich has studied cifects of coloring and cleverly knowledge. She said dur- at interview Vhen the play has come to the f life, | must wear gowns » the mysterious sadness. ow colorings then to out the paleness of sadness of Acainst a background of some- imes rather dowdy, small town peo- Magda but also Mag- ea center of interest, In the first act Mme. Kalich appears i gold metallic evening wrap with mink. Other gowns also ke effective use of metals. In the production there is a young ss, ina Hards, who plays Marie, little er of Magda, Through r tion the role is given fire and enthusiasm that makes for great contrast with the soul stir- ring cepths of the elder woman, rs in the cast which will lagda” here were chosen their roles only after careful serutin, Fourteen players make up the east. Prize Winners in Contest Announced Grand Forks, D., Nov. 30.—Three hundred dollars were recently offered in prizes by the state mill and eleva- tor, Grand Forks, for the best letters telling “why people should use Dako- ta Maid Flour.” According to the report of the com- mittee of judges appointed to select the winners in the contest, it was no easy matter to select the best from the many hundreds of letters sent in, most of which were of high merit. Mrs. Roy Wells of Langdon wins the first prize of one hundred dollars. ‘Mrs. Oscar Mickelson, Brocket, wins the seconl prize, fifty dollars; Harris Wilson of Bottineau wins third prize, twenty-five dollars; Edith M. Erick- son, Underwood, wins the fourth prize, fifteen dollars; and the fifth prize of ten dollars was won by Mrs. Frank Tucker of Verona. In addition to the above prizes one hundred per- sons who sent in the next best fettets will receive one dollar each. It is said that the contest was very satisfactory. The winning letters will be published in pamphlet book : form as cach is a testimonal for Da- kota Maid Flour. . Patterson’s Loss Placed at $15,000 E. G. Patterson, proprietor of the = Patterson Dairy Farm, places his * loss from Saturday’s fire on his place east of the city at $15,000, The large < @uiry barn, built about 15 years ago, was destroyed by flames which start- ed’ as an employe was thawing out frozen water pipes. The roofs of two « silos were burned and the walls of _* the sos may have been damaged by) ail coats and dresses f 5 taken to re- Clearance ertson, CAPITOL THEATRE That there is no urge greater than the “call of the sea” is the theme of “Breed of the Sea,” F. B, 0.'s Gold} Bond Special to be shown at the Capitol Theatre next Thursday. The story opens with a boy who is studying to be « minister, all the while battling with his love for the sea, and hoping that he may fal- fill his father’s wish by being or- dained a minister. We next see the boy when he has reached manhood nd is. pursuing the career which Fate in a strange way has be- queathed to him. Ralph Inee who directed the picture, also plays the role of the man who loved the sea. The story is from the pen of Peter B Kyne. The adaptation is by J. G. Hawks and the continuity by J. Grubh Alexander. our Rob- || ‘We ‘have wool’hose for chil- idren, For ve 47: | the Netherlands, Poland, } 191,168 non-immigrants, compared to our own stute productavof ail kinds,” plans, Mr. Donnelly’ pleads, Ye "| )4We have been told that. small rear Trt r= Leraft. on Lake Superior are makins Fewer Immigrants |jhiriet ip, te Fite the ine Denied Admission (70 70 cing tauwcenwionips: to United States ji of liquor. s States has been stemmed by an in ving about 1,000 gallons which * at telligent selection of aliens at the | ports of embarkation, Secretary of; Ki in report. i Trim! and the Twin Cities with automobile flow of immigration into the United agents made several seizures total- Labor Davis said today in his annual! One s Good Elimination Is Essential to Good Health. of the outstanding accom- plishments in the immigration bu} eau’s administration during the pas year, the report was the exten-! sion of the foreign service to con-’ tinental Europe, technical advisers on immigration questions having been assigned to Great Britain, Belgium, Germany, rway, Denmark and Sweden. ' A decrease in the number of im- | migrants refused entry after reaching Ellis Island resulted, ‘the report add-; ed, 1.2 per cent of the 276,646 aliens who arrived in 1925 having been ex- cluded, but only six-tenths of one per cent of the 270,074 being re-, jected. The total number of aliens Zdmitted during 1926 was 496,106, "including = i the value of Doan's Pills, a stimulant diuretic, in this con- dition. Scarcely a nook or ham- Ict anywhere but has many enthusiastic users. Ask your neighbor! DOAN'S "u: 458,435 with 164,121 non-immigrants in 1925. I “The majority of immigrant -aliens | admitted during 1926,” said the re- port, “came from countries on the eastern hemisphere, but the net re- sults of immigration and emigration gives the western hemisphere a high- er net total.” Denbigh, N. D., Man Given Prison Term St. Paul, Nov. 30—()—On a plea of guilty in district court here to driving an automobile without per- mission of the owner, Jack Prescott, 21, Denbigh, N. D., today was sen- tenced to an indeterminate term not to exceed 10 years. Two to Hang For Attack on Woman Gray, Ga, Nov. 30—(#)—Sen- tences of death in the hangman's noose were pronounced on Jarrett Benford, 24, and Wade Johnson, 23, of Baldwin county, in superior court yesterday for a criminal attack upon un 80 year old woman more than two years ago, HALF PRICE On All Boys’ Furnishings We are discontinuing our boys’ furnishings depart- ment, needing the space for our men’s furnishings stock. Buy your boy’s Xmas gift here at half price. KLEIN’S TOGGERY O wonder Holiday Nut Margarine brings such 2. fine, new zest to familiar foods. There’s no fresher, nuttier flavored margarine made. Try it as a spread for bread ....try it on salads, meat, fish .... use it in meking pies and cakes . : Just try it. Then you'll see why so many womefi will have no other brand. General | § Northern Cocoanut ButterCa Minneapolis, Mian. Robinson Fruit Co. bootleg prices was worth between! association is making plans to enter- £20,000 and $40,000. “This was all! tain the Missouri Slope pleyers at a liquor being: smuggled. io. It was} bowling tournament during the weck stopped right at the border ,how-| of December 12 to 18. ev z = sO RD 5 RR ant of the vrohipitioa | department's activities, General Kii- now declared, will be centered on the Korder, although squads . of | agents will be kept in both: Minneapolis and Final clearance of dres3es| arv-nged in two groups at ts prices, cnJy $10.75 and $9..75.\ ‘Sizes 14'to 36. Coats Ae hd groups, $25.00, $45.09, BOWLING TOURNAMENT 5.00 and $100.00. — Dickinson—The Dickinson bowling (MhOp.” > Less than four weeks until Christ- mas. ‘Your friends can buy anything you can give them—except your pho- tograph.’ ‘Let tis make those photo- graphs ‘for you and take care of a dozén*or more gifts. Phone for av- poiritment ‘before 10 in the morning. Phone 898, °°! An exolic innovation of the royal wardrobe. A strolling pump of black patent with the new straight line heel—dis- tinctive with an Arabian Shutter decoration of ebony suede three tone underlay, backed with Alladin Satin. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1926 * Announcing The Opening of the Novelty Gift Shop 417 BROADWAY The following are displayed in our stock of im- ported novelties: Tapestry from Belgium, Venice, Madeira. It: Cut Work. Chinese Fancy Work. a WATCH FOR: FURTHER ANNOUNCEMENTS Next door to the Coney Island. Restaurant CPHOWN EXCLUCIVELY AT Webb Brothers SMART SHOES FOR SMART WOMEN ~ Note the SIZE oF PEAS. Printed Right on the Label Suppose you buy one brand of Peas of a fine quality pack— yet you buy size 5, the largest of, the sieve runs—you may not like those peas because they were too large. All Brands of peas are in FIVE sizes. No 5’s being.the largest and No. 2’s and 1's being the small or ‘‘French pea’ atyle. Mo. 2's, 8's and 4's are recommended for the average ‘Beseman Canning Op. peas are grows the famous Gallatin Valley dhe mont adapted pea growing in the entire U. 8. You ean easily Getect their finer flavor and exceptional tenderness \ Large, fresh, black walnuts, $4 2 “hundred, 92.25 for 50 Ibe, and , $1.25 for 25 Ibs., f. 0. b, Washburn, Frigidaire More for Less rey Offers ‘New Low ‘PRICES Sr si70 weeraaee SPESIIO eee Smee pemrereen) B. K. SKEELS » 408 Broadway Bismarck, N. D. K. SKEELS, Rrondway, Binmar. Please send me complete information about Frigidaire, "im the Peppermint. flavored, sugar-coated jacket. Another treat in the Peppermint- flavored gum inside the sugar coat. That's ‘Wrigley’s P.K. _ —utiadst value in long -l-a-s-t-1-n-g delight. Ie’s-really double value — outside and inside—a double treat. And it's double value in the pleas- ure and benefit it provides. ' Wrigley’s adds a handy DacKs=