The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 6, 1927, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper — = -TaE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) and blood figures class mail matter. ‘ Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | This is no new fay by carrier, per year gq |felt rather out of \ by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)...... 7.20/the cood old days oy BF mail, per year,” : ; he was given to (in state outside Bismarck)........ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. + 6.00 i Member Audit Bureau of Circulation = Member of The Asseciated Prese ‘The. Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news di There is, appare | we grow old the world, unaccountab! | Not only do our friends leav the Bismarck Tribune Company.| 6st cherished beliefs .» and entered at the postoffice at behind in the processi that seemed xo advanced a few 3 President and Publisber | out-moded and quaint. , 8.00 | really paid to live \great-grandchildren of his old cronies must have * |seemed dreadfully modern und hoydenish to this declining graybeard. | Being alone, either in old age or at tches |time, seems to have terrors for us Americans. 7 memories but quite solitary in the world of flesh 90° For while ss young. ntly, little help for it. ud p var s seem to get left » find that notion ars ago are now Doubtless Methuselah it, toward the last, and pined for a few centuries ago, Very likely oadering, at times, whethergit longer than anyone else; the complaint ny other We SLOTS LEAT OOM _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE of those suffering from kidney ly in use over r®Poley Pills, diure! Elks Meeting Tonight Negotiations Are Completed For Sixty Per Cent Payment ; and the Towelke officers: W. H \. 0. Ramstad, vice arities never take anything for in| company, which will have its office | Malaise, all of Beulah, and J. D. Mar:| when his car was struck by a train o'clock today last Monday will be shall, Serena, Ill. . {McLane of Larimore who was killed 1 ‘entral Ch | lah, $10,000; Frank E. | ton L. Malaise, V. Important to Bismarck * ——— uidation of the bank's atioirs i ark of att Inquest Today Into in the opinion of those who h. interviewed regarding it. Auto-Train Accident fairs will make available to its <le- positors almost immediately approxi-| Grand Forks, N. D.. May 6.—®)- im chances of getting back the grea part of the balance very favor: | | WIN THREE WAYS graduates enroll at Dakota Business | College, Fargo. They're wise to! in the First National bank. rhe who haeban Death of Victim of method of handling the bank's af- ately half a million dollars, with | An inquest into the death of Arthur { Ss | o-—__i'*g | CORPORATIONS ,| SUMMER STUDENTS ‘go KD Every summer marry High Schoo. | study when fresh from school; when | Es iso the local news of and plished herein. PI Foreign Representat! E G. ICAGG Bldg. = PAYNE, BURNS & S) NewYork ." - = (Official City, State and Ceanty Newspaper & Lonely Age Now that he is 93, the well-known Mr. pew announces that he likes old age well enough that it is a bit lonely; he has, y Wein yfinozy, ‘his is a predicament liable to E in living beyond his allotted three score and teb. As the years slip by the old affother, slip away too; and presently one finds onc- s@f pretty much alone, host to a id it or not otherwise credited in al All rights of republication of ail matter herein are also reserved. . LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY jis _pa-jrack our ingenuit: pontaneous origit | we organize clubs ives DETROIT Kresge Bldg. MITH Fifth Ave. Bldg. Chauncey become pithless. he says, no one to : . Roop will continue to be y to devise means to escape it; charge of the affairs of the holding by the score; we flock to theatres Jand ball games and the like; we are even addicted | to doing our traveling in “tours,” so that we may al-* | ways be surrounded by companions. e jlater, we must accept loneliness as our lot, and) A WARNING ‘subsist as best we can on our own inner resources. And it is right here that cur lives seem to be faultily constructed. A lifetime devoted to the sell-| SIGN Yet, sooner ing of eytemobiles, the drawing up of legal docu-} ments or the maneuvering of filled with action, memories that can be drawn upon later. railroad trains is but it has few heart-warming We spen i Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN will \ —_—_— “Stop Cheating ve | Say School dren | An amusing boycott which a num. | ber of school children huve recently | enforced against a certain soft-drink dealer in one of the large cities af- | fords new evidence of the independ. ent spirit of the rising generation. “We used to trade with this dealer regularly,” says the spokesman for this group, “but never again until he | Jearns that when w: ask for Orange- Crush we want Orange-Crush—and nothing else!” . The reason for the positive stand these children have taken is ex- lained by the fact that Orange- classes are smaller and advancement | more rapid; when they’re sure to be | \naking money months ahead of | ““the Fall crowd.”” Recent typical results of D. B. C. | ACTUAL BUSINESS training; (copyrighted—unobtainable —_else- | where): Elsie Mallinger was sent to Attys. Murphy & Acker of} Hankinson on her graduation day. | | Watch results. ‘Follow the Suc- | | ceB$ful’’—June 1-6. Write F. L. | Watkins, Pres, 806 Front St. Fargo. Age is not unenviable if it has a background. Ii life has been rich and full, age will have hidden anyone who per- friends, one after tragic. crowd of ancient earlier years. reservoirs on which to draw. always be somewhat melancholy; but it need not be Age, to be sure, will It all depends on the foundations we lay in our the all of our forces in working, and at the last we fini relieve constipation safely, that our inner selves have somehow shriveled and permanently! Headaches, pimples, spots before the eyes, insomnia—are all symp- toms of constipation. They are seri. ous enough in themselves—yet they are often forerunners of worse to follow. Constipation is the cause of more “han forty diseases. It ‘spares neither young nor old. Yet it can be relieved—more, pre= vented! Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN is Cw pe to bring relief. ellogg’s is 100° bran. It produces *' results no part-bran product can rush is made from real oranges, | contains real orange juice, whereas | the cheapened substitutes which are | | offered in its stead get thelr flavor | | entirely from imitation extracts. \ In making Orange-Crush, the} | Juice of luscious oranges is blended | with the delicate flavor of the peel, | the zestful tang of the fruit acid | found in oranges, lemons, and limes, |a pure food color such as is used in | | cakes and candies, healthful carbon. | | ated water, and pure cane sugar.—A | Sabieee helpful drink for chile ren. Mothers ere warned to instruct | their children always to ask for Or- | |ange-Crush by name and to insist | | that served them in the Krinkly | Bo | For | Best Results } in Your Baking BAKING | FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1927 at Larimore, by County conducted at 4, Coroner G. L. Anderson. Capitol Theatre Tonight and Tomorrow Matinee Tomorrow at 2:30 EXPRESS ae a) A Smashing Drama of the Rails! Here’s a mad, whirling, rushing, roaring, hair-lifting drama of splintered steel and welded hearts! A real thriller that'll make you grip your seat! A picture. you can’t afford to miss! 1 , Featuring Jack Daugherty and Blanche Mehaffey From Frank Spearman’s famous story “The Nerve of Foley” Our Gang Comedy “Uncle Tom’s Uncle” ee. tr a ee ca alae et as Jd ice le eal a equal. That is why doctors recom- | Drink Delicious mend it. \ Orange-CRUSH KG POWDER Serve ALL-BRAN often. Eat two | ESaint Sinner @ Be 1927 & WA SERVICE, INC acting naturalls, which adds’ consi mah wearing about a size en! “No.” ‘ shoe, a narrow shoe, probably an A width,” ‘Chief of Police Morehouse ans®ered. “That is an natkow shoe, i r. house?” Churchill asked smilingly. “4 believe so.” Morehouse, may I ask if you Stand Jury about these pe- r footprints in the snow be- net tlre window of the room in which Ralph Cluny had been mur- de: ” Churchill demanded with len portentous gravity. “Well, no,” Morehouse admitted re- luckantly. “Why didn't you?” Churchill shot! at him fiercely. “Well, 1 thought they were made «by g detective or a policeman. The ee nds were alive with my men here is a drain pipe down the outside wall of the house near thé window which was open when MrgHathaway discovered the body of hiscunele. is there not?” “Yes. About a foot from the win- do It ends in a elbow near the ground. that is, near the terrace that | three or four Morehouse re- “Phe drain pipe extends down the walt. between the porte cochere and sthe window, does it not?” Churchill pergisted. “Yes.” “Phere is a roof to the porte co- chefe, isn’t there, Chief?” Churchill was: suave and pleasant again. es ‘@here/was no snow to speak of on the concrete driveway veneatn _. 2 eae Editor's Note: This is the 27th cMapter in the story of a former ughboy who is revisiting nce as a correspondent for The Tribune and an advance | agne. murderer or for | “Did you look for the peculiar footprints further than immediately , beneath the window?” Churchill kept at him, “Well, we did look around, Hatha- way and I, but there were thousands of footprints by that time, made by }my men searching the grounds, as 1 Morehouse, did it oc- cur to you, in orderi arch of the grounds, to examine the roof of; !the porte cochere for traces of the! | murde Churehill sprung his} | sensational question in a thunderous! | voice, a forefinger leveled on the un- happy chief of police. “No, Mr. Churchill, it didn't oecur Morehouse answer- js face flushing darkly. w, Mr, Morehouse, one more | question: Is there n policeman or a n your entire force th: 3 a size eleven, width A sh Churchill demanded impressi “Not to my knowledge,” answered. “Is it not true that you sulted your records and ba that no member of the force w e shoe?” Churchill persis Morehouse “That is all, |, smil- | | ing broad as he took his seat. | Banning seized ferociously upon his | to examine his witness | “At whose instance did you make} this interesting research into the rec-| ords of the police department?” he| jasked sarcastically. his anger get- ting the better of his caution in deal- | ling with the chief of police. | | estas | TOMORROW: Cherry and Chris laced near the scene of the crime; | y a surprise witness for the state. @ MEA Servue | pilgrimage to Romagne—a_pil- grimage of reverence. | American Caretaker Walter B. Shields, once of Rich- mond, Va., is the caretaker at Rom. | He keeps a daily record of all his visitors. The names of count- s@ard of the “Second A. E. F.” ‘tugs Americans are written on the | CHAPTER XVII Romagne—in the Argonne. | \d winds between two roll- on the right is the | .. on the left) cipeses flashing » Every state; is represented by its; ‘or here rest the re-| maiis of those soldiers of the First A.®. F. who fell in the battles for rt | almost impenetrable _region.| Thé victors of Exermont, of Som- megance, of Buzaney, Dannevoux and | Dof . . . the heroes of a titanic conquest their objective reaghed. an ree women, dressed all in black, | are.walking slowly, in single-file, up | a Fane @mong the crosses. They aré Frenfh widows. Two of the wo- men lost their husbands in battles ale the Somme. One lost two sons; in the Champagne sector. They have! no graves to visit because the cas- uaies that have affected their lives | are listed as “Unknown.” But, on, twa, occasions every year, they make | — nee eee, | ELTINGE THEATRE { point of acting, direc and “The Fire Brigade” qi f the rally great pictures it | the fortune of this, F-to witness. This picture, juced with the cooperation of the | Fire Engi- 8 | it oe EGE at the inge yester- and remains for today and Sat-| LT eek leach succeeding picture into a bril- pages of the great book in the lobby. The last name recorded was that of Capt. J. M. DeWeese of Louisville, Ky., “on leave from Honolulu and reporting to Cheyenne, Wyo.” | jut Shields keeps no personal record of the French who come to| Romagne. They do not sign the! register. Their visits are recorded only in numbers. “February 1, 1 “February “February A Shrine This Year And so the record runs. Thou- sands of French people come every | year, pay their wnostentatious re- spects. and depart. Many are dress-; ed all in black, as the widows today ‘Romagne is a sacred objective still. Romagne is in the Argonne, not far from Exermont, and Sommer- ince, and Buzancy, Dannevoux and Du: To its 14,000 graves will come thousands of the American Legion- | naires when they arrive in France this September. . TOMORROW: Songs of 1927. growing in dramatic stature with liant artist. ‘An excellent peformance is given by Holmes Herbert as James Cor- ‘in, and Tom O'Brien, has another interesting character part. Eugenie Besserer as the mother of Ray con-| tributes an excellent bit of emotional: acting. CAPITOL THEATRZ An entire motion pictuse pfoduc- tion made wi it once setting foot. inside a studio is a unique fenture Express,” the Uni-! verasl-Jewel, directed by Edward the Capitol the pict adapted by | Se ee eo me ened See a Aer The picture is a s' ing, enacted with marvelous accuracy and fidelity to detail. The romance of transportation is shown in all its adventurous setting. The brave men d_stout-hearted women connected with the railroading industr icted as they really are and we fol their lives under the guidance of that master of ou! productions, Director Edward Se wick. cases, with every meal. Delicious with milk or cream—and add fruits or honey for an extra treat. se it incooking. Insoups. Sprin- over other cereals, Delightful ackage. STILL SUFFE t thing with a live yy energet It is a miseey™ ag an tired, weary body from a. resti sleepless bed. W. K. Holland, lington, Texas, thus: WHY “906 is “I bet that and See Us If you expect big grocery values. We will not disap- point you. With our untiring efforts, seeking the markets for the best buys, you are sure to get here the most for your money, and Service in a Sanitary Delivery to your door. Delivery service allows a wom- an to do more work if she wants to or more rest if she wants it. It gives her more time for recreation or for sociability. It gives her comfort. It helps to enable her to improve her health and mind. Use your Phone. Just call Nine- Five-Seven and let us prove it. Give these items your careful consideration: Celery, Head Lettuce, Car- rots, Cabbage, fresh Toma- toes, Sweet Potatoes, Cauli- flower, Radishes, Cucumbers, Green Onions and Beets Fag ease regular 2 pkgs. '... 45¢ Ai ie secu small, juicy, 69c for pound . “Mother’s Cocoa,” 2-lb. “Sunbrite Cleanser,” age Schilling Coffee Oranges, Lemons, Bana- nas, Apples, Grapefruit and fresh Strawberries amt Sardines,” ovai can, cans for ...... 29c “Butter,” Fancy Cream- ery, per 4 4 c Measuring Spoon With Schilling Coffee or Tea ; tablespoonfuls daily — in_chroni F lespoonfuls daily ""palicons | | Same Price Remington Typewriters “A machine for every purpose.” See the Remington line before purchasing typewriters or book- keeping machines. for over 35 years 2§ ounces tor 25/7 MILLIONS of POUNDS USED BY THE GOVERNMENT Guaranteed Puré Remington Typewriter Co.| With Hoskins-Meyer Phone 19 Bismarck Richholt’s Cash and Carry [Reem] Grocery [=m THE ORIGINAL CASH AND CARRY STORE Satuniay yan be pane last opportunity to get agan of linneopa Canned Fruits or Vegetables freg.migeonry 5-can purchase, sa \ Fancy lot of dressed Chickens, per pound ........... Pork Loins, Rer pound ....... Swift’s Bacon, per pound .. : Te , Swift’s mild cured Picnic Shoulders, per pound Eggs, 3 DREN, 22. 2 oc ee cla's Macaroni, regular 10c seller, 8 packages ........,..7, Argo.Starch, Corn or Gloss, 2 packages .........0:.. Jello, all flavors, 3 packages jompson’s Seedless Raisins, 2 pounds ............. Fancy Prunes, 30-40 size, * per pound Pure Cocoa, bulk, 2 pounds Bulk Peanut Butter, Maxwell House Coffee, per pound ..../............ STRAWBERRIES SWEET CREAM AND MILK , ALL SEASONABLE FRUITS and: VEGETABLES 19¢c 19c 55c . Notice All buildings must. be numbered. before May 10th. Those not perma- nently numbered by: that ‘date will be numbered by ‘the city and the cost charged against the prop- _ "MHL. Atkinson, Building Inspector. ¢ Capt. Roald Amundsen The World’s Greatest Explorer LECTURE SUBJECT: “From Rome to Teller by Air” Illustrated with 80 Slides and Three Reels of Motion Picture Film City Auditorium — Bismarck May 11th — 3:00 P. M. and 8:15 P. M. ADMISSION: Afternoon—Children and High den i See) Adulis, 8100 eee Oe Evening—Main Flicor and Two Front Ro’ , Remainder of ‘Balcony, $1.00 Galery veer saa: No Seats Reserved for Afternoon Lecture Auspices Association of Commerc: Benefit Junior High School Library Seat sale fer evening lectur ns Monda: Harris & ‘Woodmansee's : Broadway Bazaar 504 Broadway | M. Zvorist, Prop. —_—_— Having just ‘returned from.an eastern buyi: i where we purehased a assortment of oe ee boys’ suits, wé will pla m on a special sale at a big reduction, beginning. Saturday. _ Men’s Suits’ $25 seller with-extra’ trousers a regular ; $14.95 2 pairs of longie pants, a$15 Ladies’ ers in colors of red; green “and blue, a regular $4.50 seller, at Men's: Dress Oxtords in tan or black regular'$5 dlr, at... hare in black and tan, a tht ye jar

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