The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 9, 1927, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT LA MOURE MAN WILL BE TRIED AT NEXT TERM Next Regular Session of Dis- trict Court in That County to Open June 14 d jury in La} ty district court for the Verona, N. cashier, will be en court for trial at some time dur-} ing the regular June term of! ¢ourt which opens at La Me ure on | June 14, according to W. Fargo, appointed a spec nh pros- by Attorney General George will not be given hearing. is held in the La Moure without bonds. A provision of the state statute demands that persons charged with murder in the first degree—the chavge preferred against Tucker ‘by the veniremen after a two-day | inquiry of the slaving of the bank-| er—be held in jail without bonds unless a special permit is granted the defendant by the presiding dis- | trict court judge. | May Ask Release | According to N. J. Cruden, sher- iff of La Moure ipated that an pecial permit which would r qake him from custody if he could rovide bonds will be filed with ludge George M. McKenna, Napo- lecn,’ who called the grand jury and presided at its session, the first of the next wee According to Mr. Green, district court was adjourned until “the next regular term” by Judge Me- Kenna at the conclusion of the grand jury session Friday, This! session is to open on June 14. Mr. Green, E. M. Warren, s rttorney of La Moure county Harold D. Shaft, Fargo, also svecial prosecutor, will prepa a pre- jal} ate’s their case to bring it into court at i the June term, Mr. Green declared. Tucker Maintains Innocence | Tucker has notihng to say con-, cerning his indictments, ordinss to Sheriff Cruden. He knew was under surveillance fer s time before the grand jur vened and stoutly ma’ his innocence. He appeared fore the grand jury and_ told story of his activities on March 1, the day of the Bjone ‘der. Tl ste was unsatisfactory to the jurors and resulted largely in his, being charged with the crime. { In jail, however, Sheriff Craden declares, h that his eel of his actions, is the truth and will offer nothin:: on his plans for a defense or a def- inite statement as to what his plea will be when he is formally ar- raigned in court. Mrs. Chas. Hoffman, Mother of Mrs. Geo. | Duemeland, Is Dead | Mrs. granee Hoffman of St i peace fully daughter, A. Duemeland of this city, wh she has resided for the past two months. The deceased is survived by her, husband, Charles Hoffman, of St. Paul; Ruth and Helen Hoffman, both of St. Paul; Mrs. William| Herrmann of Hollywood, Califor- | nia; Walter Hoffman of Monroe,! Michigan, Mrs. A. Duemeland. The funeral will be private. Play Day Winners to Get Loving Cups Two silver loving cups will be offered in the annual Burleigh county play day program at Fort Lincoln Saturday afternoon. One cup will be awarded to the consol- idated school securing the most points and the other to the rura school with the greatest number ints. ints will be awarded in the athletic events scheduled for the afternoon and for the music and declamation contest being held in the morning at the high school. Miss M. Runey, county super- intendent, is in general charge of the meet. Ryder Club Changes Name, Elects Head and George CLEANUP DRIV he 4 a! esking the 's who jhere shortly THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE @ Dodge Brothers SIX Will Be Here This Month. @ | Where 77. Miners. Were Entombed The explosion in the mine of the New England Fuel & ineaa portation! Co. at Fairmount, W. Va., which ‘entombed 77 miners, was so terri mine and 650 feet from the spot where the expl The inset shows one cf the | Son of Mr. and Mrs. killed. IS POSTPONED. ions Plan Final Canvass | Next Week—Strauss Named | | Convention Delegate «| Postpenement of the final clean- jup week canvass by Boy Scouts was decided on by the Lions club, | which is sponsoring the drive, at its regular meeting today. Inclement weather has made it} sible for the to hold} their canvass and it was therefore | decided to postpone the trip until | is more favorable, will probably be heia spect the tion of unsightly ewners were pre to cooper spots. ted with cards ing up th ve Iready cleaned up| rds will be given a final request on the can fail to cooperate to the city: comn take action. Dr. F. B, Strauss was elected the club’s delegate to the Inter tional Lions at Miami, Fred their Fla., June, 14 and 1 Peterson was tiamed alter- revarding the ok up m s meeting, with com tunt at he dist S n and re- hearsal of pep song pep meeting is tu be he "tc ening: ¢ 30 to com sand stunts. | prize, given by | ts won by R. E. : 2 | an Electrocuted at Jamestown Today Jamestown, N. L Albert Mish, oyed by the Ottertail Power company, was ac- cidentally electrocuted while at work at the electric light pla after noon. He about 40 y NOT BY Lenox, Mass. letter that w. mailed in New York in 1910 reach its destination here ‘ate by clean-| A Those pecple | convention, to be hetd | the | ficiating. t fay 9—(AP)| the other day,! sit in front of a fie that it wre ; occurred. rescue crews wh Quanrud Dies Today Richard Theodore Quanrud, son ce Mr. and Mrs. Thecdore Quan- of 316 Anderson avenue, died this morning at a local hospital after a long illness. The boy was | eight and cne-half years of age. Funeral services will be held Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at Webb Brothers’ chapel. Burial will be in St. Mary’s cemetery. Mrs. Forrest Harding Dies Saturday Night; Mrs. Olga Harding, 23, ‘wife of | Forrest Harding, died ' Saturday shortly before midnight at a local| hospital of heart trouble. She had been confined to her bed for the past three. months and had been ill for e before that. ing was horn , 04, the d irs. A. Kruge grade schools at Baldwin came to Bismarck where red ae local high school. On 24 24, she was married to! at Wishek ghter of and She tende ; and she en on of Mr. and Mrs. ismarek. ding leaves her husban nd { nonths-old son Her mother, ' : | Fay Mr: Another _ siste | Fetch of Oregon, will | marek Wedne: Harding also a large number of friends in and near Bismarck, F will be held Wed- | ion noon at 3:30 at the ,| Lutheran church, Fourth stre ue A, with Rey, J. V Pall bear: | pali bearers will be jong the intimate . Harding. chosen friends of Mr Interment will be! ate morning taking parlo | A. O. U. W. Baseball Practice Postponed inclement weather, | neactices scheduled | tomor- at the of team, which is anxious to sedated games with other .town and cut- of-town age gregations, | “SIT FOR SUIT New York— You must sit down) how, girls, when being measured for! a skirt, according to Mrs. Edna W. | Chase, One should | mirror with the editor of Vogue. just 16 years late. Year gree It was a New Ryder, N, D., May 9.—Change of the name of the Ryder Town Criers Club to. to the Ryder Community Club has been announced here, following a meeting recently. H. E, Mieike Negra resident of the or- Cc. ne Christianson, vice Sresident: H. O. Holm, secretary, and A. 0. Lindstrom, treasurer. Plans fare now bein; ilar Lil a Decoration Day" colebebti be held sete the, auspices of og club. and the lo: cal American Legion post. —— Have You For legs crossed, with the principal mea, sure being taken from the knee down, gotten Something? ed the mine tipple 150 feet from the mouth of the Two men working on the tipple were h worked desperately to save the entom! d men. according to Mrs. Chase. This is to avoid a vulgar display of garters and bare legs, she says 150th Anniversary of Flag’s Adoption Will Be Observed Washington, D. C., May 9—()— There will be Flag Week instead of i Day this year, it has been de- cided. The 150th anniversary of the adoption of the Stars and Stripes will be nationally observed during ‘the week of June 8 to 14. , Get your seats for the Amundsen lecture at Harris and Wocdmansee’s. Sale now /AMUNDSEN HAD | MANY THRILLS ON POLE TRIP | Given Up 1 For Lost in | Flight Over Arctic—to Speak Here Wednesday i Four times in his adventurous career Captain Roald Amundsen, the famous explorer, was given up by the world for lost—the fourth time being last May, when he made his daring dirigible flight over the North Pole. He will tell about that flight its adventures and observations, in lecture entitled. “By Dirigible’ from | Rome to Teller,” to be given at the city auditorium here Wednesday. fhe first time Captain Amundsen was given up for lost wai ad been gone for three y | attempt to reach the When he emerged from the clutches lof the Arctic he had achieved two things: He had explored the nor: thern coast of America, by way of j the Northwest Passage, the first man on record to do so; and he had re. located the North Magnetic Pole. He was given up again in 1911, when he went into the Antarctic, but returned to civilization in 1912, after having discovered the’ South Pole, In June, 1925, when he and Lieut. Lincoln Hllsworth, his) American associate, led an aitplarfe dash for the North Pole, he was lost for 28 days, and many had given up hope when he re- turned with the entire personnel of his expedition. They had been forced down within 200 miles of the Pole. In their flight last May, from Spitzbergen to Nome, their dirigible the Norge, ran into a heavy fog and then into severe storms. For many hours they were buffeted about by the wind, unable to get their bea ings, in danger constantly of crash- ing into the tall Alaskan mountains or dropping into the water or upon the jagged ice, They had been in communication with the outer world by radio, but suddenly this commun- ication was cut off, and from early Wednesday morning, May: 12, until Saturday, May 16, | the: anxiously ting world heard nothing from w: them. It was then that, for the fourth = time in his life, Amundsen was thought to have lost his life to the maw of the Arctics. Cleaned And’ | Pressed This $10,000,000 rain took the press out of a few thousands of dollars’ worth of clothes—but it’s a good swap—so press ’em in shape again. Men's suits 75c. Klein's Toggery * All purchases edie wana April were due and payable May Ist, and they become detingngat Tomorrow --- The 10th’ Delinquent accounts are depneiad to us’ immediately fol- MONDAY, MAY 9,°1927 aguanonnegan It's Not So Much How to Buy a Car as Where to Buy It IT’S EASY to buy a car. Toduy’s prices and terms put the price- less boon of automotive trans- portation within reach of prac- tically everyone. The detail that needs careful judgment today is where to buy one. Here we sell local responsibil- ity and ample facilities for op- eration and maintenance—in other words, satisfaction in ownership—as well as a car. Stop in the first time you're around this way and we'll give you tangible evidence of our ability to assure satisfaction to the Whippet and. Willys- Knight owner. : Backed By Personali ‘Your Printing should be a reflection of yourself and your business. ‘In other words it mirrors your personality. ® ‘And here is a shop that is known for its qual- ity work,, quality materials—and quality “service. ‘, May we have an op prices on Printing jortunity to quote you it brings results? SUCOTSUAENNESUNNORNGSONananOnnagN

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