The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 19, 1927, Page 3

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itinerant BMayor will appearance at the spick and 2 TUESDAY, APRIL 19, JOHN GILBERT; PICTURE STAR, IS ‘DOING TIME’ Gets 10 Days For Disturbing Peace—Beverly Hills Loses Its Reputation Beverly Hills, Calif, April .19. —(P—John Glibert, film idol, was released on parole from the city jail today after having spent a night and a day in a cell in which he had been sentenced to serve 10 days for disturbing the Peace. Beverly Hills, Calif., April 19.—(P) lohn Gilbert, new idol of motion icture fandom, is in jail,esand Bev- Ny Hills, law-abiding suburb of Rogers, has lost its eputation as the city of perfect be- avior, Gilhert started a limited personal span terday aiter harge of dis Appearing in po- Beverly Hills # pleading guilty to turbing the peace. lice court, aon, admitted having / 1 invaded the Beverly Hills police ata- ion at 3°. m. Monday morning of last week and disrupted the serenity of law enforcement headquarters. “Ten days,” said the police judge. “Amazing,” said Gilbert after over- coming his surprise. The desk sergeant at the police station said Gilbert had demanded the arrest of some person whom the actor was unable to name. He be- came so_ persistent and clamorous that he finally had to be locked up on a charge of disturbing the peace. Gilbert said he was uncertain whether he had taken a few drinks before making the early morning raid on police headquarters, He express- ed concern lest Mayor Rogers vbch. sail would detay starting work on a film sea story of rum runners. Reid Is Chosen to Accompany Seton on Reservation Visits Russell Reid of the North Dakota Historical society has been chosen hy Ernest Thompson Seton, well known naturalist, historian and writer, to accompany him on an cx- pedition to several Indain rcserva- tions this summer to secure data for various projects which he has under- taken. , The expedition will begin in July «d arrangements are not comp! | For some 35 years the 1997 By Bertha (Editor’s Note — This is the first of a series of five articles written by Miss Bertha R. Pal- mer, state superintendent of pub- lic instruction, in connection with the memortal service and mi sionary rally to Be conducted at Walhalla June 26 in commemora- tion of the 75th anniversary of the death ‘of the first Protestant- missionary in North Dakota.) Sunday, June 26, 4 be Memorial Day a Walhalla, North Da- kota, to observe the 75th anniver- of the deaths of three Christian onaries who gave their lives un- der most dramatic circumstances in the cause of bringing Christianity to the Indians, Circumstances which seem dramat- ie to us in 1927 were, however, not out-of-the-ordinaty happening: the matter of life and death in the early 60’s. These services are in charge of the Presbyterians, the Congregation- alists, the Methodists, the Evangeli- cals, and the Baptists of the North- west in memory of Elijah Terry, the first Baptist missionary to come to Dakota Territory, who was killed hy Stoux Indians June 28, 1852; Mrs. Alonzo Bernard, wife of the earliest Presbyterian missionary, who, while serving with her husband, died from exposure October 22, 1853, and Mrs. Cornelia Leonard Spencer, wife of an early Congregational missionary, who wag shot by the Indians during the! night of August 30, 1854. | bodies of these martyrs of the church remained tm the prairie graves where they were first 1 but, through the ef- forts of. Mrs. C. 0. Van Clove of| Walhalla, in June, 1888, were removed to the utiful spot in the cemetery on the hillside back of the village where a granite shaft marks their resting place and tells the story of their great service for God and country. Generally, speak- ing, We do not consciously recognize that the early Christian missionaries have a place side by side with early explorers to whom we do not hesi- tate to give full credit for inesti- mable service in opening up the coun- try, in the early days of our history. Indeed we are slow to recognize or at least to acknowledge that our growth along religious lines has kept pace with, if it has not been always a step in advance of, our polit progress. Pioneers in both have blazed the way and the coming mem- otial service at Walhalla is but a delayed tribute, Christian Influence In this connection a brief sketch of early Christian influence will be timely and interesting. Long before Dakota land was in although it is known that they w visit the reservations in North Da- kota and go to Colorado. Ar- rangements have been made whereby the Colorado visit will be made dur- img Mr. Reid’s vacation, thus permit- ting his absence from the state. Mr. Reid has recently purchased from M: nd Mrs. D. T. Owens part their holdings on Lounsberry Road and plans to plant trees and native shrubs and beautify the prop- erty in the near future. + a I Today’s Scores | (Morning game.) New Yorke 10120010 Boston— 10060020 Greenfield, Bently Wertz and Gibson. 1 NEWS BRIEFS | Eight American sailors and British, Italian and French soldiers and s ors suffer bruised heads in a fracas in a Shanghai cafe which starts over a comely Russian dancer and is in tensified when some one shouts: “Who won the war! 0—5; 11; 1 x—9; 12; 1 and Hamby; Prominent men throughout the country praise Governor Smith's re- ply to Charles C, Marshall; governor declines to answer new statement by Marshall. ‘Spanish troops in Moroceo take of- fensive against rebellious tribesmen as punitive measure and burn several villages Refugees arriving at Bessarabiun frontier points report grave disorders throughout ‘southern Russia _ and Ukraine; demonstrators in Kiev, Ode: and Kherson, shout “hands jina;” citizens refuse to an- swer soviet’s can to the colors. y Baron Tanaka, head of Seiyuk: party in Japan, becomes premier in place of M.: Wakasuki, resigned. Willigm Hale Thompson, inducted into officé of Mayor of Chicago, Promises to -s ae out crime in 90 days and make Chicago the world’s aviation center. Robert A. Cooper and Edward E. Jones resign at Washington as mem- bers of farm loan board. Minneapolis—Board of regents ap- pointed David MacMillan, basketball coach at University of Idaho, as head basketball coach at University of Minnesota. Faribault, Minn.—Charges against’ Charles B. Remmvy. former county auditor charged with misappropria- tion of funds were dismissed in mu- hicipal court on grounds that “no of- fense had been committed.” / St. Paul—Senate passed six anti. crime measures and defeated a bill to curtail powers of board of parole, St. Paul—Governor’ Christianson signed four anti-crime measures, in- cluding one-creating criminal appre- hension bureau. Fj St, Paul—Legislative membership would be reduced under a bill intro- duced in house providing for refer- endum on proposal in 1928. +» St. Pawl—House passed educational ‘appropriations bill, providing for ex: penditure of not more than $21,000,- 000 for next biennium, Minneapolis—Five persons were in- sjured when gee) tank exploded in ce Betlach Jewelry company work bad * St. Paul—Sennte p: ‘house bill providing for 60 cents resident license fee for all-Minnesota anglers. the distant future, the work of Chris- tian missionaries was helping to make history in this new world, for it is now acknowledged that it was the influence ‘of these consecrated workers that secured the neutrality of the Oneida and Onondaga tribes ‘of the Iroquois Confederacy, and of the Moravian missions in’ Pennsyl- vania and Ohio that restrained the Delaware nation from hostility to- ward the early white invaders of the Indian territory in those far-off early days of our beginning before we became united in our interests. The residence of the missionaries, Whit- man and Parker and others in the Columbia River country, was a very material influence in the early rec- cognition of that territory now Oregon and Washington as a divi- sion of the United States. The immense district northwest of the Great Lakes contained permanent missions before 1820 at Mackinac by Presbyterians, at St. Boniface by Roman Catholics, and at St. John (now Winnipeg) by the Church England, all of which points had fa: real influence. In car own territory the names 6f Morse, Terry, Ayer, Hall, Rigs Stevens, Barnard, Sloan and others re contemporary with Snelling, Sibley, Kittson, Sully, Rice, and Cus- ter. It was largely through the mis- sionaries that the peaceful and bene- EARLY NORTH DAKOTA State Supt. of Public Instruction | | not laid out for them but who fol- 1 Can we the bodies | MISSIONARIES | | R. Palmer | ed here till 1879. The first Protest- ant church building in North Dako’ was built by the Presbyterians at Bismarck in 1873. by Father Sloan, as} he was affectionately called by all) denominations. He had the respect | and good-will of the whole country, | everyone contributed to the build- ing fund, the Magdalenes of the town sent a stocking filled with silver dollars. He was often called to the bedside of Ronian Catholics when a priest could not be had. Who can imagine the experience and adventures of these messengets of pence in the days when there was no peace? Such adjectives as “thrill- ing” dnd “romantic” are gveak when used to describe the everyday activ- ities of these devout and zealous mi sionaries whose tasks and duties were lowed the injunction “what soever thy hands find to do, do it with thy might.” In our mind’s eye today we travel over the country mentioned as knowing these great souls of near- ly a century ago. But we go by train and steel rail or by car over well laid out and many times well kept roads, nor can we travel many miles! in any direction without going), through villages whete any need may be supplied and by welt supplied farm homes where one need but ask to! receive. The winter just past is the first in three that any road in the state has not been passable for cars. We scarcely know any more the! meaning of physical discomfort from want of clothing, food, fire, or lack of means of rapid transportation. then imagine the trip of! 406 miles from Pembina to St. Paul | now made in a day or a night but) then six weeks in a two-wheeled ox {eart or following a sled drawn by | dogs? To call a neighbor for help| | meant a walk of 15 miles. Always} ; the extra buffalo robe must be car-| ried in case one had to spend the| jnight on the road, and the bag con-| taining food and matches. The shel- ter when reached was a log room| which must have a fire built in a fireplace. Before the 60's there was but one stove in the Red River Val- HE BISMARCK RIBUNE ss ae SSSI ee OVER 100 TAKE ‘HEAVY RAINS recorded heinits"° “wreak ‘a the Special Election | ar stat, Chuatt was a Dnekee wiee | SEND STREAMS itt Guing'eeriamarie stax at Cooperstown Te i. 'sc th uses mettre ts TO NEW MARKS |#2 for 60 mites around today. The i ” break occurred late yesterday. Eng- |lish, Altheimer, and Keo, Ark., are in the path of that break. PART IN MUSIC, ORATORY MEET. Turtle Lake Wins First An- nual Contest; Washburn | Second; MeClusky Third . | Hetd Not Necessary | ssf2u site sous Capitol Theater (Continued from page one) : “art . 0 need exists for holding a spe- hension from IMinois to the Gulf of| “Arkansas. is believed to be suffer- , on iat Coopetstewn: thet Mexico. ling more extensively from the flood general's office has notified | Thousands Driven from Homes |than any other one state due to . Millions of acres of land have been | overflow in tributaries of the Missis- inundated, according to estimates,|sippi. Western Arkansas was grad- due to the backwaters, breaks andj ually fighting back to normalcy as overflowed tributaries, while thou-|drops in a few streams in that sec-| sands have been driven from their|tion were reported. : homes. ? Worst Flood in History A score or more have already died} The eastern portion of the state in the flood waters. The damage to|was in the grip of the worst flood | ment to hold the city election on the Property has not beensestimated. in history. | first Monday in April, The law in- New breaks in tributary levees; At Fort Smith, in the western part! structs cities with the commission | were reported last night while wa-|of the state where the Arkansas! form of government to hold their crosses the border from Oklahoma, | élections on the first Tuesday in there was a rise predicted, and further widespread damage pected. As a result auditor there. | n of whether or not the! last city election was legal was} raised when was ascertained that the clection was held on the wrong day. The state law requires cities hay- ing the aldermanic form of govern- LAST. TIME TONIGHT Patsy Ruth Miller “BROKEN Turtle Lake, April 19.—(Special). Over 100° students from high schools at Washburn, Underwood, McClusk ad Turtle Lake took part in th irst annual music and declamation contest held here Thursday. ! Turtle Lake won the contest with years ago and again this vear Cooperstown, a city with the alder- manic form, held its city eleetion on t i of the rising tribu- | a total of 71 points; Washburn was} taries to the north, number of Second, with 56; McClusky third with | jnortgagor levees protecting the Yazoo and 48 and Bowden was fourth with 26. | heim, mortg | Mississippi delta across from Ar- The contest was put on for the; and filed fo ‘ ° threatened to give under the load. Throughout the’ Mississippi valley, the problem of caring for refugees question was raised and the city au- ditor appealed to the attorney gen-| eral to find out. if the men elected | were legal officials. ice of the Register and for the County of 1 ate of North Dakota, rd, 1925, and recorded in said of- first time this year under the direc- tion of Superintendent Johnson and will be staged again next year be rleigh and | in January | HOLLYWOOD” cause of the success of this year's|fice in Hook 163 of Mortgages, on) was being met by organi malt Answering the specific question if| contest, according to those in charge.|puge 54, will be forecloned by a | groups. The Red Gren other 4 special election would be necessary, | Imperial Comedy slag ily eeoeion pont li of ad premises in such mort-| organizations were mustered into the attorn neral held to the con-} 2 oratot eld in the afternoon) Kae and service a aking “ay any | Sra! swering a question to ‘ but because some of the entrants| {ie f Seentuatity, making ready for any whether the ucts of the city ebunell “The Bathing were unable to get here in time for National guardsmen’ joined the during the last two years have been * 29 the afternoon program, they were al- ranks of civilians In pageoling the leet, the attorney general held that Suitor lowed to speak in the finals during levees, they were, since at least they we the evening program. de facto offi and presumed to| ‘ompetition Keen act in the vhi ey be Competition was particularly keen déscribea in sna} f a Meek CRS naten eee ae Tomorrow in the dgelamation and oratorieal | ce sand which will he sold to ! Temperature and | vont amie ae 4 | Francis X contest: ‘wo Turtle Lake entrants, y Une sanie are thone rPry .. t 1 . . Clara, Weinhteg ‘and’ Faye, Svemsan | ain the | Road Conditions | Mouse River Nearing Bushim: na placed first respective! ment Pa he sie 7 | s @ placed Cae eres ws, tonwit: | 8 + Flood Mark at Minot os Wake of Bowden won second place. arte SE ‘and, the (Mercury readings at 7 a. m.) a and Lloyd Williams of Washburn took} South Half of the Sou Bismarck— Cle: roads rough, (DA raw} s first place in the oratorieal contest/ter (S'2 of ~SWi%) St. Cloud—-Raining, 50; roads fair. d from the northwest forced the | one and Nathaniel Dalbotten took second, | Twenty Minot—Cleat, 19; roads fair to mercury down 46 dl Billie Dove In the boys’ reading event t i AE i Minot, and at 7 a Tohneen ef Waan yee eat of |” Fargo--Cloudy, roads fair. tis Olson of WII Weems On eae Mandan-—Clear, 21; roads fair. Harold Brew of W Ruxe on the da Grand Forks--Cloudy, 33; roads ‘air. The Winners Jamestown- The result of the events were as follows: ‘ Contralto solos: modsgaard, Bowde: Seib “THE MARRIAGE CLAUSE” artly cloudy, that the | of the | which is slowly rising | th the flood mark but three | ads soft. ; roads poor. ronds sof t, Olive Thor- second, Edna of March, IM, rf cloudy, ley and it had taken two years for it to be brought out from St. Paul. Performed Many Services The missionaries were called upon for all sorts of services; but espe- or sorrow, their presence was in- dispensable. Theirs was the one re- | ence ‘and in all the great distances inhabited by fierce animals and fierc- er humans, theirs was the one touch of humanity, the only voice which spake of love and eemfort and led the thoughts fro~: the poverty and discomfort of the present, to the con- templation of the possibilities of the | future. |. Who can measure the influence of } these pioneer souls that blazed the way where highways never ran; who opened, not only the country, but the hearts of men to the influence of religion? SES cay Sr ARERR WO ese ' SUPREME COURT | ——— From Cass County Wilda Berry, a Minor, by Ella Berry, her Guardian ad litem, Plain- tiff and Respondent. vs. Albert Winistorfer, Defendant and Appellant, SYLLABUS: (1) The age of legal consent to enter into the marriage® relation and to consummate a marriage is fixed by Section 4358 of the Compiled Laws of 1913, in the case of an un- married female, at fifteen years or f) upwards. ¥ (2) Section 4368 of the Compiled Laws of 1913, which authorizes the annulment of a marriage on the ground of the non-age of a party, permits annulment when a party “was under the age of legal consent and such marriage was contracted with- out the consent of his or her parent or guardian,” and it is held that “the ficial fur trade was organized and administered, and many times it was a@ man of God. who made possible the treaties during the early years. Two Stories - Our history would be pleasanter reading in many places had the spirit of these unselfish and self-denying missionaries been maintained in deal- ings with the Indians instead of giv- ing. way to the selfishness and greed of the adventurer. Indeed, all through these years of ‘exploration there are two stories running side by side, and often interesting—the dark one of treaty breaking, bad faith and corruption, the exploiting and defrauding of the Indian by the white man, “the blackest page in our history” some writers call it; and the other story—bright and glorious with all the best that man is capable of, the self-sacrifice, courage,’ and se?v- ice of those who sought not their own but another's good, who dedicat- ed their life work to the spiritual and temporal welfare of the India: who endured trials, hardships, priv: tions, and perils to carry on, in the midst of a ¢entury of dishonor, the appeal of the neglected and defraud- ed Redman for a sharé of the light that had been shining through many centuries in the white man’s path. If ‘there is anything in’ our early history that we can rev it life and work of these pioneer mis- sionaries. Perhaps one of the most distin- guished and. most influenti ‘one whose influence is reachii was "Frat De Smet, born and éducated im Belgium but giving hi life to the Indians of the Dakotas, Montana and Wyoming. be: jo. gr was the confidence and trust of the Indians in him that the government repeatedly besought his aid in paving the way for negoti tions with them. In 1864 and agai in 1867 he was the agent for peace and he alone in 1868 induced the Sioux to meet the government com- missioners and arrange a treaty. At this time, though 68 years old, he traveled 360 miles through the rough unknown country of the’ upper Mis- gouri and Yellowstone to reach Ft. Berthold, His name is today on the maps of three states, South Dakota, ‘Wyoming and Montana. Catholic Missions Missionaries of the Roman Cath; olic chureh had traveled up and down and out from the Red River Valley as early as 1630 but the first per- manent m: itory wa: 1815 at. land. :The ‘Catholics built first at Bt. Boniface in and akota’ Lend in 1848 at St. Joseph, ‘alhaila, establishing a church school and mill. In 1851 Reverend Alonzo Barnard, husband of our Mrs. Barnard, held the first Presbyterian CMe on North Dakota soil at by the Presbyteriang in japtist, but no building way ereet- . * ion settlement in the ter-| Dakot: s Selk "d by James Souther-| Dal ina in company ‘with James Tanner, | | age of legal consent,” within Section 4368 authorizing annulment, refers to the age of consent as fixed by Section 4358 of the Compiled Laws of 1913. Appeal from the District Court of Cass County, Hon A. T. Cole, Judge. REVERSED. Pic a of the court by Birdzell, W. H. Barnett, and Francis Mur- phy, Fargo, North Dakota, and Al- fred Zuger, on oral argument, Bis- morek N. Dak., Attorneys for Appel- jant. W. J. Courtney, Page, N. Dak., Attorney for Respondent. From Sti an County Christof Meidinger, Plaintiff and Respondent. vs. Security State Bank of Medina, North Dakota, a corporation, De- fendant and Appellant. SYLLABUS: 1. The homestead estate is for the protection of the family, and when once established it continues to exist after the death of the hus- band or wife for the benefit of the surviving husband or wife or minor children. 2. Section 5627 is intended to preserve the homestead right when the title thereto is in the deceased husband or wife, The survivor does not need that vrotection if he has the title. In such case he has not a life fhe | interest in the property as provided section 5627 but he is the owner fee, and the homestead status hav- ing been established during his mar- ried life, it continues to exist after the death of his wife, unless volun- tarily abandoned. 3. Where a homestead has been established and occupied as a home- and it is necessary to take the hus- band to the home of his son-in-law on account of his physical and mental infirmities, extreme age, and child- ishness, and for more than a year he jis cared for in the home of his son-| jin-law, such absence is not volun- tary, and is not an abandonment of the homestead estat ‘Appeal from the district court of Stutsman County, North Dakota, Hon. Fred Jansonius, Judge. AF§IRMED. Opion of the court by Burke J. Burr, J., did not participate; Hon. C. W. Buttz, Judge of -the Second Judicial Distiict, sitting in his stead. M. C. Freerks, Jamestown, North Attorney for Respond Carr & Rittgers, Jamestow: kota, Attorney for —Fresh have almost completely destroyed th village of Roquebilliere, which w: stly wiped out by a landslide se eral mont ago. Now other slide: are oceurring and few inhabitants left movi ng to safety before their homes are buried. cialy in timer of rejoicing or sickness {double q fining cultura) and uplifting influ- | C stead by man and wife, the wife dies, | C John: Mortgagor. do by melting snows _ Soprano Erma_Ode-|Combs, Ti & Hanchett, 8 § i. mere ard, Bowden; second, Ruth Klein,| Attorr Winons—-Cloudy, 54; roads fair. now reached a reading of 1 urtle Lake; third, Annie Wahl, Me-| 1. ¥" Rochester—Cloudy, 56; roads fair. fears heen expressed Clusky. (First Mankato—Raining, roads soft. nundat Small groups of orchestral instru- ments: First, trio, Turtle Lake; | second, quartet, Washburn. | Piano duet: rirst, Washburn. | . Mixed small vocal groups: First, tet; second, McClusky. it PERSIAN WOMEN FREE Paris.—Although women of Persia still wear the veil, symbol of slavery, they arc among the freest and hap- AN EASY WAY TO LOSE FAT} ered by EP. Crain, P. | Girls’ all vocal groups: ,| Uederson, George F. Palmer and| piest in the world, according to Mnie. . Fy Rowen; second, abartet Mer; Ward Fritch, mortgagors, to 1. A.|Dalatobadi, Persian feminist leader , » The right way to lose fat is by com= poatind, siuee; weeele Take, April diz] who is studying here. They have bating the cause. By correcting a gland | bs!’ First, Meclueky record, in the | educational facilities equal to men, Which largely controls mutrition. No | she, says, as well as economic and in- or diet is required. dustrial independence abnormal exerci: s y ‘mola Prescription eo Burleigh and , Turtle Lake. va) ve Richard | ieee ‘Tablets, four a day, until proper re- Walls, Washburn; — second, Richard | of Mortgages, on | ts are accompli: 1. 5 ea ae race, Will be foreclosed by a spilt pesknsaee Kin, Forte. Lake: “third, Witbert|fak° of the'remaeg fn mach, mort Too Late To Classify nama is the scenic method, Te ld, 3 sky. ql gage ter descri | vans » ecg has been uses 9 years, | Boys" ‘small vocal groups: First, |{ne"rront. dock prithe ‘cours houte| WANTED—Storm window work. mat figures that it Drives are seen | quartet, Turtle Lake; second, quartét,/in the Ci | Price reasonable. Call after 6 p. every circle now. And th ha | McClusky; third, quartet, Washburn. |! | m. Phone 734-M. Sed ae cee Does, * | Piano solos: First, Vera McCurdy, ——. wn, through those results, ‘to very | A F riend In Need ; Washburn; second, Clara Johnson, mount due) FOR SALE—Garden lots east of Wish Bowden; third, Dorothy Arvidson,| {i} e Richholt school on city water. Price ply Marmota at $1 Whether your income is | Turtle Lake. iS : ies. described in said) and terms. Inquire of J. L. Clifford, | h box contains a pamphlet i _ 2 Saxophone solos: First, Richard! nd which will be sold to| 411 Sixth street. which explains the results you sec and from farm or H { Klein, Turtle Lake. same are those certain} ed In the County of| LOST—A pair of white kid’ glov Go get it now. Learn what oth- whether you handle the Violin solos: First, Dale Stillman, tuat ers know about ii < i vi ; F : ; 2 it, You will . Washburn. : s pe North Dakota) with black stitching @m back. Prac-| Nehtod = plow or the pen; wheth- Brass instrument solos: First, pees . tically new, Finder please | return | if Dale Heinzeroth, Turtle Lake. er you work in an office or in the open f to Tribu Reward. | 27) Township One Hundred Forty (140) re- sponsible for one of the funny sub- titles in the picture. Patsy Ruth Miller, as one of the “extras” in the seque + of Range Seventy-eight (78) | FOR SALE—Oak China closet, ma- ‘lds, you North, Seventy i SALE set, ms oston Dental Co ny { of the Fifth Principal Me- dresser and chair, bed, 1 Ching, need > protecti [ j_ At The Movies 1/riic).0 the Pn Pinca ate Med apsings, “Maoea cee! | DD ismarck’s Dental Clinie sey Deo cuOUe “carol sueato = THEATRE ce C4 ante: hasan Reasonable prices. R. W. pextaisiineites sound, dependable insur- Probably unknown to herself, an ‘Three Hundred 311 Third street. Phone ance. extra girl, who plays “atmosphere” y-five Cents eaves strainliyacair' he Wares FOR SALE—Twenty volumes Book of Insurance after a loss is Bros.’ epic of Filmtown, now show- Knowledge, half morocco, $15.00. a friend in need. *But ing at the Capitol thestre, i Excellent Upright piano, .00, ™ don’t wait until after a \f| fire or other misfortune See this agency of the be Werneke book case, 3 sec: tions, $16.00, Oak library table with | writing ‘compartment | and book | shelves, $16,00, music cabinet, draw- er and six shelves, $8.00. Rare bar- Combs, Ritchie & Hanchett, Atturneys for Mortgagee, tity, North Dakota, DR. R. S. ENGE is a newcomer to Hollywood, , 4 | } her first experience is that "of z.| Bains. 414 W. Rosser Ave. Chiropractor \{' Hartford Fire Insurance McLain” the “Holisancd "Sheik aD- FOR RENT—One nicely furnished Free Examination 'f Co. today. It may save Given a scanty costume to wear, room suitable for two. Call any {i you heavy loss tomor- she is somewhat bewildered, snd time after 2:00 p. m. 303 Third f Lucas Blk. Bismarck, N "i ¢ : Th le street. Phone 1051-LM. row. when shown into a dressing room with a number of other girls, exclaims: “Is this where The extra girl, making a w retorts: “You mean undre: L remark caused so much laught among members of the company |that in making up the titles for tae|) picture, Lloyd Bacon, director, re quested that it be used. “Broken Hearts of Hollywood" is the story of all that is Hotlywood from the lowlands to the high!inds; the life of its people and their ac- tivities, dramatically porirayed by | \! a stellar cast including Patsy Iuth| j Miller, Louise Dresser, Douglas Fair- banks, Jr. Stuart Holmes, Barbara 26: Worth, Emile Chautard, Jerry Miley and others, ELTINGE THEATRE Mae Murray will be seen at the Eltinge Wednesday in “Valencia,” aj} romantic story of Spain. She plays a fiery circus gypsy enmeshed in a strange intrigue of high society in the aghaes Moya Hughes plays the. leading male role and the cast in- cludes Roy D'Arcy, Max and Robert Anderson. ‘wife, mort- of Morton c vin, his to State ‘Bank MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” 216 Broadway Phone 577 BISMARCK, N. D. AUDITORIUM THEATRE One night only—Saturday, April 23rd ‘ Mail Orders Now—Caurtain at 8:30 Seat Sale at Harris & Woodmansee’s April 21 TRIUMPHAL TRANS - CONTINENTAL TOUR nd State of D h di of Janua recordéd assigned by an instru ing to First State Minnesota, dugod t », 75 of asvignments, page which mortgage will be for le-of the premises in su i herein: seribed, the front door of the court house in the City of Bismarck and in the Coun’ Burleigh, and y the 27th day y due upon said mortgage on the day of sale, The premises deseribed in said mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same, are those certain premises situated In the County of Burleigh, and State of North Da- V-ta, and degeribed as follows, 'to- Barwyn, embellishment to | Marines,” forthcoming epic Marine Corps coming to the Eltinge for the last half of the week. The big battle scene, filmed on the plains near Chatsworth, and in which several hundred regular Marines bat- tle against Chinese bandits and hold a bridge, was a “two in one” affai Primarily, for the picture, it was a great.climax for the story. But pri- marily for the Marines, it was a prac- wits The CNW) one-fourth Fifteen are Northwest of — Section (8-15) Township One forty-four (Ewp.-144 Range Seveny-nine, (Range West. of the fifth princi meridian, and containing hundred ' sixty acres more or less according to the United States Gevernment surve; thereof, That there : mortgage at the date of sale the # of the “THE ARABIAN” _A Flaming Stunning Story : @f London, Cairo and the Egyptian Desert - by The Author of “The Hindu” one will be due on such tice maneuver. ry ft Ninet hundred ninetee: ASSIST Pi a plays, the leading nd 16/100-—D ara ($1919.16) he= ap ar role as a veteran sergeant,'sides the costs an isbursements and William Haines. the. romantic/of such foreclosure ax provided and A NOTABLE NEW YORK COMPANY allowed by law, Dated this 16th day of Apri FIRST STATE B. Dayton, Minnesota, Aasignee of the mortgage. A. 1, Helgeson, Attorney for the assignee of the mortgagee, Regan, North Dakol (First publication April 19, 1927.) ‘ 4/1926 910017 -24 lead as a recruit. Others in the cast are Eleanor Boardman in the prin- cipal feminine role, Carmel Myers, Eddie Gribbon, Mitchell Lewis, Frank; Currier, Maurice Kains and others of| Ing Tax 1927. ihe, $1.65, $1.10; Gallery, 50c Lower Floor, $2.75; note. DEATHLESS SHOT BAGS GAME: ALIVE throughout the i be enriched by the ition of specimens of those kinds of animals which have been almost impossible to capture alive, as the result of an invention of Captain Barnett Haris, sportsman and repre- rentative of the Chicago Zoological Society. is It is a deathless bullet which pro- duces complete unconsciousness but} no permanent ill effects. The “mercy bullet,” as he calls it, contains a chemical which is released upon striking the animal. Entering. the blood, this drug almst instantly Produces'a state of coma. ‘Coptain Harris will go to Borneo soon’ to use his new weapon. He: expects to gorillas, whi cure drang-outangs an which are easy to shoot, pe extrémely difficult to capture alive, 7 A Stamese kitten was recently res- cued by a‘stéamer in mid-ceean, from its perch on a floating hatch cover, -} « . BUILDING NUMBERS ‘Che city does not’ require ‘that building numbers be purchased from any particular firm or indi- vidual, Numbers must be at least three inches in height and. placed over the entrance to the buildings. Do ‘not remove th¢ cards showing the numbers’ until after May ist, regardless of whether or not , buildings have been permanently numbered. M. H..ATKINSON, Building Inspector.

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