The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 1, 1927, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT ° SEN. REED AN SAPIRO HAVE WORD BATTLE Ford’s Counsel Complains to Court That Witness Wran- gies Over Fine Points Funeral For Coal Gas Victim Will Be Saturday P. M Lyla Dorthea Lue girl who died morning at her as the result of he home near Dri onl gas fumes, wil buried tomorrow afternoon Jamestown cemete of her mother were hi this Driscoll . A your brother and the yirl, who were also 4 Funeral afternoon at beside the grave THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ' Fort Yates School Will Be Formally Dedicated Tonight: Formally dedicating the recently} A mayor, two aldermen and a city completed Fort Yates. public school! treasurer are to be elected at the, ya program is to be given tonight in annunl Elgin city election Monday, Elgin Officials Are Unopposed For Reelection la. member of the supreme court, held jfor the plaintiffs. The supreme \ court, in a decision today, reversed One mortgage was given by th ers ss to Fleckten, Ros | Brundage as directors, the shows, while the. other was given to| the bank, of which Baird bechme re- | ceiver. | In its decision ce court held that ..,| “in an action to determine priority | Cairo, Egypt, April 1—@)--What | of mortgages on the same property, may prove to be the earliest tomb | where the record shows that the find-| | Archaeologists Estimate It Was Built 50 Centuries Ago—Carefully Hidden the ¢ imp hoy has completely Firestone Dealers Holding Meet Here Dealers in Firestone tires from the Slope country, were to open a meet- this afternoon to discuss ising, ideas, nd table discussion ws o'clock this afte . T. Severs, Far of the Firest ‘orth Dakota, was to sp F to be held at 6 clashed | tonigh atterson ho Reed, | motion pictures of rubber growing on }the company’s farm in Liberia will be shown, Ap recover Aron 000 Libel t 1 million ny for leged de for than A he q ef Ford counsel. Reed Complains to Judge to Judge Fred M. said: “Your! continually | Two Deputy | Sheriffs Are Shot to Death April L—() —Dey Kenyon and A. L. ad ing fault with my than attempting to Reed had asked speeches made in Texas in behalf of the Te farm cotton associatio You were still Reed, Sapiro picked him up instantly. “You mean I was there he asked. “Your question indicates I was there the whole time.” pas “All right, all right, sir, have it ur own way,” the senator replied d turned to the judge to protest. arpio was upheld by the court in instance as justified in not an ing Reed's first question. Services Are Held For Edward Smith Services for Edward Smith, 68, who died Tuesday morning, were held Thursday morning at the Presbyter- ian church, with Rev, Walter E. V: cr officiating. Interment took p in Fairview cemetery, Mrs. Frank Bavendi to; 1920 in| tees neeeed aes y were shot to d bureau) near Whittenburg, ne jtoday. Hugh Walker Bailey, out on bond in connection with the nt killing of Coke Buchanan, po an, were arrested. @ bodies of Kenyon and Terry found near their automobile, | evolvers unfired | Kenyon was shot through the chest and through the back of the head. Terry was shot through the head. n. there in 1921? asked Social and Personal RETURNS HOME R. Dearth has returned to | her home in Fargo after a week's visit with her mother, Mrs. L. C. Wallen, Mrs. €. Vi sev Mr. and Mrs. M numbers. Palibearers were William Ha R. L, Best, M. O'Connor, William coner, H.’ B. Neighbor and Charles Wachter. art and visited | Dearth Acquitted on All 7 Counts Indianapolis, Ind., April 1. (®) Judge Clarence W. Dearth of the Del awure cireuit “court quitied on all seven cou penchment c! y the state senate. The impeachment charges i mn of the nn of urned home after a short visit in Bi rek. RETURNS HOME Odie Kingsley has returned to his home at Mott after a few days’ visit in the city i ON BUSTS s Indiana . Faber of Mott is spending a few days in alleged husiness. freedom of the! n unqualified | nfiseation of | impaneling of uunquali-| nd other alleged corrap rimes Whe would be back on TO F Mrs. S. HW. Harris left: Thursday evening for Fargo for a visit with | friends, | HERE 2M FORT RICE Mrs. ILL. Wheeler and Mrs | Rice of Solen spent Thursday i | marek. Veterinarians Are Fewer Despite Need! HERE FROM HEBRON Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Evalt of Heb- Washington, | April, 1, —#) Young ‘men secking professions are | turning less and less to the veter-| inarian’s calling, and Dr, John KR. Mohler, chief of the Federal Bureau of Animal Industry which protects the nation’s meat supply ameng ot thingy is deploring the fact, The 1 accredited veterinary colleges of the} country are turning out scarcely enough graduates to supply the Fed- eral service. not to mention the needs of State and municipal services and the large field of private practice. o—_______—_e | NEWS BRIEFS | British cabinet at emergency meet- ing, says London Daily Mail, decides to send something in the nature of an ultimatum to Cantonese govern- ment demanding reparation for kill- ing of British subjects. Commander Robert S, Cabiniss, U. $. N., killed, and several of crew injured by crash of airplane during naval maneuvers in Caribbean Sea. Senator Norris, Republican, Neb-| raska, announces’ he will retire at) end of term in March, 1931, and runj| for governorship. nie hirsty folks who disregard the con- John J. McCloy, New York, elect-| stitution. Beginning today denatur ed president of reorganized Chicago,' ed uleohol will be quite nauseating. Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad. | — ig . | Basle-—The number of jokes in Great Britain ends financial year| the world has been decreased by on: with deficit of about $180,000,000. | Poland has a navy—-at leust a me: i Big ‘eantile marine. The Rhine is open Interstate Commerce Commission| for navigation as far as Basle. decides value of railroads shall be) determined largely upon costs, prices} Cheyenne, W and wages obtaining in 1914 rather) ferred to the Lu : than upon higher prices of flater| applicant for a job has written the years. j state superintendent of | public in- : “Your application for a wernor Moody of Texas ate calls for my maiden withdrawir volitical amnesty of| name. I am not married yet. Wha former James E. Ferguson. | Shall T do? VISIT HERE and Mrs, Allen Taylor of Si J s in the city Thurs- HERE ON BUSINESS Keith Grounds of Mott is transact- ine business in Bismarck for a few days. VISITS IN BISMARCK Mrs. G. Held of Hazen is visiting friends in Bismarck for a few days. HERE ON BUSINESS C. A. Buckley of Timmer was in the city yesterday on business. HERE FROM STEELE F. D. Jones of Steele was in the city Thursday, visiting friends. See “When Smith Stepped Out.” Rex Theatre tonight. oo EEE ap | FLASHES OF LIFE ' (By The Associated Press) Washington—-Uncle Sam has a lit- e April fool joke for insistent —Respectfutly re- Stone League, an possible by the use of modern ma- the city, transacting | ed friends in the city Thurs- | the new building. A talk by Miss Bertha Palmer, state superintendent of pubic is to be a feature of the there will be other talks program 1 the Is Helen Irons nty superintendent, and others. | Made of brick, the new buil i h' and is expected to ommodation for ' students of Yates vicinity. | Nigey Hotel Sold_ to Chas. McDonald | Charles MeDo |county sheri ald, former Morton y took charge of jthe Nigey hotel, which he has pur-| {ehased from FN. j Opti | | Nigey. non the property was taken| early in the year and a deposit to! exericse the option was paid about three weeks ago. Mr. Nigey plans to take a trip to | Europe within a few weeks, but will’ jcontinue to make his home here on his return, he sa |J. C. Taylor Talks to Mandan Rotarians J.C, Taylor Bismarck, manager of |the International Harvester com- |pany’s branch there, was the_prin- cipal speaker at the Mandan Rotary | ¢ club's regular meeting, held yeste: Jday noon at the Lewis and Clar | hotel. | The speaker ment of the ha’ vention of the McCormick in 1831 and told how the} International Harvester company is; now building the harvester-thresher, which is destined to become the most used harvesting machine in the grain growing states. Addition of other lines of machin- ery and distribution of products through 93 branch houses and 17,000. dealers by the company brings the! ‘farmer in every section of the world in close touch with modern methods, and makes ible = quick replace- ments and repairs, Mr. Taylor said. +90 per cent of the; population of this country was en-! gaged in agriculture, today but 10 ner cent is engaged in producing foodstuffs, Mr. Taylor said, and pointed out that this has been made rk| traced the develop- vester from the in- aper by Cyrus H.} chinery on the farm, producing all ‘that is required for’ the people of this country and providing a large surplus for export. 3 Last Minute Bulletins Washington. April 1.—(AP)— Orders for the concentration of 1,500 aditional marines at San Diego, California, to be held there for possible duty in China, were approved today hy Secre- tary Wilbur. Tokyo, April 1—(AP)—The Japanese cruiser Yakumo has been ordered to leave Yokouuka tomorrow for Shanghai, with a landing party of 500 bluejackets. oo At the Bismarck | Public Library | “ee The following new books are ready for circulation at the children’s room of the public library: Bullen—The Cruise of the Cacha- lot—This book tells of whale fish- ing and life on the deep sea as ex- perienced by an Segiish boy aboard a New Bedford whaler. Crump—The Boys’ Book of Mount- ed Police—This book tells of the heroic service and strenuous lives of the mounted police in the United States and border countries. Drummond—The Monkey That Would Not Kill—The story of a mis- chievous monkey who seemed to have as many lives as the proverbial cat. Jonckheere—When I Was a Boy in Belgium—the author writes about his school and home life and the manners and customs of his country. La Prade—Alice.in Orchestralia— This book gives in story form much information aboyt the ,musical: in- struments in an orchestra. Meigs—Rain on the Roof—Stories of the past woven into a story of the | present with a New England town }for its setting. For girls from 10 to 13. | Perkins—The Swiss Twins—The ‘story of the everyday |and Leneli in their Swiss home. Skinner—Nursery Tales from Many |Lands—Humorous folk tales with many illustrations. Wilson—Waheenee—An Indian girl's story told by herself to the \author and written down by him. Pee emesis || IN NEW YORK | | | Rapid City reported that 15 inches Attention Odd Fellows and of snow fell i |, Black, Hills. \ Rebekahs—Custer Camp N St. Paul—Senate voted, 40 to 25, to| 16 extends you an invitation innefinitely postpone a bill to estab-! to attend an April Fool’s par- lish’ a bank ~uaranty law. St. Paul—House voted, 88 to 28,,Come and enjoy yourselves. atte Nant? “slats” ation Fer Odd Fellows and Rebek: Senate committee indiAted later it would start holding all day hearings | in effort to finish before legislature | ends April 21. | . Minneapolis—John W. Doherty, po hot and elf; Be gure and see the “Spin- shortly gfter sters’ Convention” at Rex Theatre‘ Tuesday, April Doluth—Business block occupied | ® P+ M.—50 and 25 cents. by Duluth Electrical Supply company ind the Van Dyke drug store was ‘doxtro; d by fire with loss of $200,000. ‘Attention Odd Fellows and Rebekahs—Custer 16 extends you an invitation Le e had been summoned | to chief's office, Reason for suicide was nat anounced by police. Rex Theatre tonight. \'Three Children Modesto, Cali April ge een night, The tire ploding oil probably, fatal {ty Friday evening, April Ist.' See “When Smith Stepped | Out.” Rex Theatre tonight. | - See Unele Bill find his hat. ie - New York, April 1.—Most of Man- ttan’s historic spots are hemmed} ‘out by those newcomers from an ‘old world who have drifted into the jolder sections of the city and, only through their children, come to learn "|port of a city band. re of Seppi! 2) {April 4, and all incumbents have ‘been nominated for the offices with- out opposition, | d. O. Kranick is the present may- or; J. C. Bender and Fred Reinke, jermen, and M. C. Rausch, treds- | izens are to vote on the propo- jon to levy a one-mill ‘tax for sup- if || Mandan Vicinity | ANNIVERSARY MEETING Mandan lodge, No. 21, A. 0. U, W., will nave its thirty-fourth anniver- sary meeting Thursday | evening, April 7, The meeting will be in the nature of a banquet at the Lewis and Clark/hotel and will be followed by a dancing party at the Knights of Pythias hall, An excellent program has been arranged for the evening with J. H. Newton as toastmaster. J. M. Hanley and Rev. G. W. Stewart | will speak. RETURNS FROM SHRINE HOSPI-! TAL Michael Ressler, young son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ressler, has returned from the Shrine hospital at Minne- apolis, where he has been receiving treatment, and is very much improv- The ‘brace has been removed from his leg and he is able to get about without a crutch most of the | time. i ever discovered in Egypt has b unearthed at the village of Sak third dynasty Pharaohs. ations under the auspices of the Egyptian antiquities department, came upon the tomb at the bottom of a deep stairway through a cares fully concealed tunnel in the rock, as though the builders had taken every precaution to prevent discov- ery. He believes, although he has no definite confirmation as yet, that it is the tomb of Imhotep, architect to King Zoser, who built the step pyr- in the boundary wall of which tomb is located. Imhotep was considered one of Egypt’s wisest men and the founder of the science of medicine, law and other branches of learning. Another possibility advanced by arcnaeotogis.s 18 that the tomb might have provided a temporary resting place for the body of King Zoser himself while the step pyra- mid was being constructed or that it might be the tomb of Zoser's queen. Editors of N. D. Daily Papers Meet . in Fargo Monday Fargo, N. D, April 1—U)—The annual spring meeting of the North Dakota Associated Press association will be held in Fargo on Monday, i with representatives of the various Associated Press newspapers of the RECEIVES BIRTHDAY CAKE Conductor A. Nichols, who yester- | day celebrated his fifty-first year at! lroading and bis forty-first year the same run from Mandan to | ndive, was presented with a birth- day cake by the dining car service of | the Northern Pacific. Mr. Nichols i | now retired on pension, having pass ed his seventieth birthday. HERE FROM FARGO J. A. Monroe, entomologist with | the North Dakota agricultural col- | lege, is spending several days in Man-' dan at the Great Plains Experimental | Station. He is making a special study of the shelter belt work being | done at the station, \ RNS FROM VISIT . kson has returned from a visit with friends and relatives in Minneapolis. Mr. Erickson went to; Minneapolis two weeks ago upon’ the sudden dea® of his wife. | Mrs. son was buried in Minneapolis. | Battery with its Bowling Green,| Fraunce’s Tavern and other land- | marks of revolutionary times, the | colonies of the Turk, the Armenian and the Greek cluster, close. | newest of Manhattan's. mu- just opened to the public, is jon, where Wash- ington Irving retired to write that he might breathe the mists from the East River and gain inspiration from atmosphaziec surroundings. It is a spacious mansion built upon the leveled remains of an old fort t the foot. of Eighty-eighth str To reach it one passes ancient brown stones long‘since turned into tene- ments where the dark hair and flash- ing eyes of the Hungarian are seen at every turn. In the basements are | Bavarian and Hungarian coffee! houses and cafes and the flavor of the old world is everywhere, except in_the architecture. Fruit and vegetable stands, vivid) with color, jut out upon the side-; walk; windows are cluttered with) the faces of children and women; dark, brooding faces that, follow until the street plunges suddenly into | the river and the light of Welfare | Island beckons. | ss H ! . The G mansion has been pre- served intact, an unspoiled slice of another centur, Here dwelt one Archibald Gracie, merchant prince of his time, whose flag wai to be found} flying every sea. Outside the| preservation of the house itself, the; one suggestion of a museum is to be found in a theat: al collection. The As the street slips off into the river there are indications of another change. From an aristocracy the street grew old and threadbare, grad- ually becoming a foreign quarter and belt of tenements. Now there are signs of a social return. This hap- | pened in Sutton Place, where a single block has become ultra-exclusive, made into homes by prosperous ers, artists, actors and such. The same is soon to happen to the; neighborhood of the Gracie Mansion. Michael Strange, wife of John Barry more, was among the first to take |a place. Here she writes her verses and her plays, The Duchess de Riche- lieu has rebuilt a corner and several actors have reconstructed old places. | They have given it the flavor of old | England and have called it Hender-| j son Place. | Once it was a little settlement, known as Yorkville, and for a time | the heart of the city’s German settle- iment. They moved-on and others came, It’s one of the new places t6 visit jwhen in New “York. Just go to \Kighty-eighth street and walk east- | ward. | GILBERT SWAN. | of the traditions of the neighbor- hood in which they liv Thus, down in the vicinity of the 3. | Follow Mr. Hoff- ner’s remarkable wonder- 1—)-- Three small children were burned to death before their mother’s eyes an fire razed Juan Sandoval’s ‘home at was caused by at, ex- stove. Another. el iy’ burned. a NO MORE SICKENING PILLS FOR HIM 68-year-old man constipation wi See “When Smith Stepped) Out.” Rex Theatre tonight ins. relief from ALL-BRAN St. Two tablespoontuls dally—tin recommend. state attending. John B. Cooley, managing editor of the Grand Forks Herald, is pres- ident of the association. Edgar T. Cutter, Chicago, superip- tendent of the central division of the Associated Press, will attend. At oon Monday he will address the Fargo Lions club on the work and |seope of the Associated Press, and| the visiting editors will be guests of the club, Supreme Cou Reverses One of Its Own Members The supreme court today was plac- ed in the position of having reversed one of its own members in the case of Alle Fleckten, R, M, Rose and Lee Brundage vs. the Ward County Farm. ers Press, and W. A. Beardsley as trustee and L, R. Baird as receiver for the First Farmers Bank of Minot, appealed from the Ward county dis- trict court. , While sitting as judge of the Ward tounty district court, A. G. Burr, now ANNOUNCEMENT T am a candidate for reelection to the office of Police Magis- ‘trate. W. S. CASSELMAN. (Pol. Adv.) ——————— DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Free Examination Lucas Bik. Bismarck, N. D. William A. Hughes Candidate for CITY COMMISSIONER April 5th (Pol. Adv.) Three Cans Tube Patching . For 55 cents See Our Window For Saturday Only Bismarck Accessory & Tire On your Bi send ar Mother fiowesn Hoskins-Meyer Home of K-F-¥-R Unsalted Butter Sweet, unsalted butter may be had at our dairy at'206 Fifth St., from our route saleaman or through your dealer. . Bridgeman- Phone 740 of 741 Cecil Firth, supervising the excay- | en! ings of the trial court are not sus-| } ‘a,itnined by the mortgage record and| not far from the ruins of Memphis.| the documents themselves, the judg-! Archaeologists estimate it was built! ment will be reversed. 50 centuries ago in the time of the! of the ancient! Naughton . Township Will Hold Rabbit Drive on Sunday Continuin, the ackrabbit Sunday in Naughton towns! miles northeast of here. People from Bismarck who plan to attend the drive should go north to Arnold station and then east five | miles ta schoolhouse No. 1. Every- | on- who intends to take nart is asked to be mt the schoolhouse before 12/ o'clock, aa the drive will start| promptly at noon, The drive will take in the entire township and as ~any hunters as can attend‘gre wanted. Ammunition will Brovided by township resi- dents “4 a lunch will be served after the hunt to ali who take part. Almont Talent to | Present Program y, Over KFYR | when talent’from: $hat city will present # program. | A choir under the direction of Mrs. N. EB. Beeklund will sing an Eas- | | ter anthem, as well as several other sacred songs. The definite program has not yet been announced, but it will include vocal solos, violin solos, readings and | instrumental selections, as well ensemble »work. This evening's program will feature Mrs. A, K. Tice, in pianologues and William Clemens Brightall, Wiscon- sin poet, in several readings, one in | tho campaign against | a drive will be held | Women Tell Others how this new hy- gienic:pad discards easily as tissue —no laundry By ELLEN J. BUCKLAND - Registered Norse ECAUSE one woman so advises others, and because doctors so urge, most women.are deserting the old-time “sanitary pad” for a new and better way. Fight in10 better-class women now use “KOTEX.” Y Discards as easily as tissue. No laundry, no embarrassment. Five times as absorbent as ordi- nary cotton pads. Deodorizes, thus ending oll danger of offending. Obtainable at all drug and de- partment stores simply by saying “KOTEX.” You esk for it without hesitancy. ’ Be sure to get the genuine. Only Kotex itgelf is “like” Kotex. Proves old ways @ needless risk. In fair- ness to yourself, try it. KOTEX No laundry—discard like tissue with a. Nutty Spread HE Staff of Life becomes the daily appetizer when it is spread with Holiday ut Margarine. If you could peek into the kitchens of the finest cooks in: this sec- tion, you would be sure to see this nutty mar- garine’in daily use. Northern Cocoanut Butter Co. ‘FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1927 salutation to B. P. 0. K. 1199, entitled “The Eiks.”, Mr. Brightall iy author of “The Tip of the Tongue” and sev- eral other books. ‘On. last evening's program were selections by Henry Halverson, ten- or, accompanied by Mrs. R. E. Mor- ris, and Warren Jenkins, assisted by Gordon Jenkins, presented several cornet solos, See “When Smith Stepped Out.” Rex Theatre tonight. “il WN ie Beinc well dressed is a business as well as a social asset. A Lanpher Hat brings you the finishing touch. Lanphers are styled by expert designers. Made from imported fur, they provide the correct headwear for the correctly dressed man, Latest spring styles and shades now on display at leading stores. mgr Popularly Priced at Ten, Seven and Five Dollars et a apr aet wntiiuuiant! = BE A TY Pe Que FREE PERMANENT WAVE If your number is listed> phone or send card at once. Must do this by Friday, April 8. “We are now issuing numbers on the April FREE Perma- nent. Service—Quality—Satisfaction HARRINGTON’S BARBER-BEAUTY SHOP Phone 130 : Bismarck, N. D. Numbers Drawn HNN {LIU Automobile Accessories Oil and Grease Tireg and Tubes VULCANIZING BY THE aWKIN "TIRE REPAIR ‘PHONE: 944: eck 1 We change tires. anywhere les |) Try Us Firest— ~ &TRECO. \ BISMARCK, N. D. Next to First Guaranty Bank Bldg. ‘ 4 eT i 4

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