The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 2, 1927, Page 3

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K. C, WORK IN HOSPITALS 1§ SOON TO STOP Lack of Funds to Aid Dis- abled Soldiers Will Re- sult in Halt Activities of the Kn Knights of Colum- bus among ex-service men in govern- ment hospitals will be terminated June 30, State Deputy James A. Gar- rity of Moorhead, inn., told mem- bers of the order at their recent con- vention here. Lack of funds was given ag the reason for discontinuing the work started during the war. Commenfing on the work of the order among dis- abled veterans Garrity said: “Thej) order at the present time is conduct- ing welfare activities in 459 hospitals in which there are 40,509 ex-service men. The work is handled by 184 secretaries ides rendering q/ Wry, services of > personal nature Ge Fy ¢ disabled men they distribute | attes, smoking tobacco, pipes, \ .§, chewing gum and other ar- thes. Must End Work “Entertainments and athletic events are conducted for the welfare of the disabled soldier, Because of the small balance in the war fund and of necessity, these activities must be terminated on June 30 of this year. “For the ten years that the order . has served the ex-serviceman this work has received the favorable com- mendation of all officers in charge of hospitals. The soldiers them- selves, knowing that the work has come to an end, have extended the hand of friendship to the Knights of Columbus, and have said ‘well done.” and Praises ‘Columbian’ Commenting on the work of the ; \order in North Dakota, Garrity urged } Yhe membership to support the offi- 1 state magazine and mentioned ith! ‘pride the fact that the state sent tWo special trains to the Euchar- istic congress at Chicago. He urged that every member lend ‘ his support to the state-wide Catho- lie Day to be observed at Vailey City on Sunday, June 12. The program for the Valley City meeting, which is expected to attract several thousand visitors to that city, is under the di- rection of Grand Knight McCarthy of the Fargo council, assisted by com- mittees from Wahpeton, Jamestown and New Rockford. “DICKEY COUNTY -y HERDS GETTING ' T.BRETESTS Hoy That County May Be Ph.ad on Accredited List Is Expressed @, Hope that Dickey county will be placed on the accredited list of North Dakota counties which are fyee from bovine tuberculosis was ekpressed here today by Dr. W. F, Crewe, state veterinarian. Work of retesting Dickey county herds now is going forward, Dr. Crewe said, and should be completed by July 1." Retests of infected herds also are being made .in Pembina, Cavalier, Burke and Sargent coun- ties, Dr. Crewe said, and these should also find a place on the accredited list this year. A county is ed list only a: and all, tuberculin infected cows climinated and a retest is made to determine that it has not a gain be- come infected. Whenever a retest shows less than one-half of one per cent of animals which react to the tuberculin test it is placed’on the list. Is Intended As Aid Although intended primarily as an aid to the herd owner tuberculin testing of cattle also puts money into the pockets of hog raisers in ac- credited counties, Dr. Crewe said. The reason is that packing plants pay a premium of 10 cents per 100 pounds for . hogs from tuberculin free counties. This premium totaled $35,000 in North Dakota last year and will become larger as the num- ber of counties in the accredited list increases and the number of hogs inereases. The -hog premium will be es- pecially important in Dickey and Sargenb counties because of the large number of hogs raised there, Dr. Crewe said. Both counties are rapidly comine to the front as pork producing sections. Packing plants make a rrofit on hogs from accredited counties even after the premium has been paid, Dr. Crewe said, statistics showing that fewer animals from such counties are condemned because they are un- fit for food. , Anti-Soviet Rebellion AMNIs Reported in Russia London, June 2.—(/)—Reuters’ Warsaw correspondent says report: from: a seemingly reliable source ai sert that serious trouble is being e: perienced in the Minsk region of White Russia. Soviet officials from numerous vill and smaller towns arrived at Minsk, demanding the dispatch of dis- civlinary d ments to enforce the governmen’ prestige and arrest leaders of: an anti-soviet movement, it is declared. More than 200 inhabitants of one laced on 'the accredit- | ofa ter it has been tested | +, village were taken to disciplinary detachment and impris: oned, and several executions occur- red on the spot, the reports state. Anti-soviet detachments are de- clared to have attacked and captured * blockhouses at Czerwianka, near the) border lines, and to have held them fer two di COP MISTAKES NITROGLYCERIN FOR. WHISKEY Stops Robbers, Finds Bottle, | Shakes It—’Twas Explo- sive, Yegg Says stopping three fleeing bank robbers and shaking a bottle of nitrog! ine to see if it was corn wh told in a confession signed by Dean, an inmate of the Atlanta fed-| eral penitentiary. Dean, serving a sentence for auto- mobile ‘theft, implicated Frank Kel! and Clarence Brooks, inn Kilby prison, Montgomery, Al the robbery of the East Atlanta bank. “While we .were going through that town ‘two cops stopped us to search for a young sirl, who had been kidnaped a few. hor It looked like a touch br stuck their h ed us wl the front seat w bottle y label on e, bottle said before using.” “Well, the cop held the bottle up to the light and took we squirmed in our sexats. almost cut and ran for cover whe he calmly shook the looked at the contents to see had ‘w! y be That's what 1) call a long second d have run if I hadn't been so scared.’ ‘shake we Former Inmate of North Dakota Prison Gets Life Sentence) St. Paul, June 2,—{)—Nicholas Schon, 75, was sentenced to life im-|t prisonment in the state penitentia by Judge J. C. Michael here Monda when he pleaded Mre Ida Robinson at het rooming house here May 10. Schon told Judge Michael that he*shot Mrs, Robinson in a dispute over money matters and intended taking his own life but changed his mind. ‘Schon admitted having served a term in the North Dakota penitentiary for first degree manslaughter in connection with the death of his wife. He said he struck and accidentally killed her during a quarrel at Ellendale, N. D., and then set fire to the house while her body was in the kitchen of the home. Sce ad on page 6—Casing and Tube Locktite Patches. We carry a full line.—Acces- sory Service Station, Fourth St., Bismarck. t sncredihy | 306 Authorities by that in ot fi iyilions Bee’ huss ceae million”. | nur FLYAOR carrier. kills pean tianen On your Birthday send your Mother Flowers Hoskins-Meyer Home of K-F-Y-R bottle and | if it} guilty to killing] i Class of 1927 Issues Annual Today — Maintains High} activit Standard Set By Those of Previous Years — Jane} Byrne Editor and Francis] j Nuessle Business Manager The class of 192 marck high school, in issuing the fifth volume of Prairie Breezes, high ‘school year book, has lived up to the high stan- dards set by previous class ing the four years in school has issued an annual it has places in the tie Pre volume of irie| that will be P. AL d today, e in the N. 1 tion next fall. Miss Jane Byrne, editor: f, and Francis Nuessle, business ger, goes a great deal of the t for the success of the pub- lication. They have been ably a sisted by the staff,eelected from tl The staff members i: Gorman, William mith, Alv Louise _ Keller, Marie Cordner,, Cook, Esther Egle, Ruth Gordon, Imer Benser Mary Jane Whittey. Many Attractive Illustrations Irene Schlencke ella Munger, Sidney Rigler, and Each of the 188 pages of the book} e cut, | is adorned with an attra its rugged hills and covered wagons es pioneer days of North Da- ota. To the baby sate! who “blazed the trail” is the 19; ar book dedicated, | and the idea of “trail blazing” forms the theme of the book. A poem, rs of the Trails,” written by WwW to Prairie 27, is on one of the opening pa; The volume is divided into ting the various sections. Classes Are Pictured h Dakota scenes, presented to Ri the first part. The admin of the juniors, sophomo fr men. A short article, giving the of- ficers, flower, motto, colors and ad- competi- | Brown, | Paui | Nell Mickelson, | ‘BISHOP SPRENG puts with the hb \has «| denominational coune: DEDICATED TO ND. ‘TRAIL BLAZERS’ visers of ench class, precedes the pic- tures. Alum athletics, organizations, | literary and features ai the titles of the other sections, Pic- tures, descriptions and histories make up each.division, The: annual was liberally patron- d by local advertisers and ‘a ma- jority of the Bismarck business firms by announcements in section. year's issue of Paririe Breezes is from the presses of the Bismarck Tribune company. TO PREACH FOR NURSES’ CLASS Baccalaureate Services Open Commencement Week For Hospital Graduates Commencement tetivities for the! class of the Bismarck 1 hospital training school will open Sunday even- ate ‘sermon. | . D.. of Naper- will pre Bae the sermon at | Bishop S. P. Spre: ville, 11 the city is well known in ece ithroughout the world) Rey. C. F. Strutz tendent of the angelical churen: He has been clected reveatedly important. offices in the F | Council of Churches of America and been promi in the inter- s. of Protes to! antism, For many years Bishop Spreng h been president of the Deacone: b of the Evangelical church and thus been closely connected with the hospital work of the denom- It will be a rare opportunity rek people to hear one of of Christianity in said today. | so preach at the 1 church Sunday morning Spreng’s ser-| i hospital leo: elu | ul selections. eniene epogeatie wit be held Monday evening at the city| auditorium and Judge A. G. Burr of; Twenty-two graduates will recei the North Dakota supreme court will | their certificates. give the address. A solo by Kenneth | Preston and numbers by the nurse glee club will complete the progra About 100 words were added to the English language during 1926, Strictly’ Unicn Made “You Can't Tell the Difference—”"’ An old, old story—That's the argument every imi- tator of the real thing offers you. Why not put one over on these imitators? Puritan Malt, as you know, gives its millions of users real, satisfying results. Now purchase a can of some other brand of malt. Use it. Ah! Comparison Will Tell! Which has that Richness and Strength? Which has that superior Flavor? Naturally, Puritan Malt. Here are two good reasons why: I—Choicest grains of No. 1 barley; sata bed Imported Bohemian Hops. For Sale by All Good Dealers Bohemian Hop:Fiavored RITAN MALT , Prove it gives best results ... . Try it! Bismarck Cloak Shop 13 Days POPULAR PRICED STORE SALE 13 Days Beginning Saturday, June 4th, On All Ladies’ and Misses’ Summer Coats, Dresses, and Millinery The Bismarck Cloak:Shop has arranged a notable clean sweep sale in every department that will appeal to those who appreciate the oppor- tunity to buy brand new summer coats and dresses at record-breaking prices. Easy to pick from est shades and finest materials. cently been purcha: duced prices, which we have now put on sale. marked with sale alk One Group of.Ladies’ and © Misses’ Coats Values up to $42.50 at $22.45 Others. at $29.50, $39.50 $49.50 and $59 One group of coats, values up to $29:50 « $15.00 One group of sport, and dress coats, values. up to. $69.50, at Millinery Reduced prices on _ all Millinery Rain Coata and House Frocks to $2.95, $8.95, $4.95 and up nearly a thousand garments of the latest designs, new- Most of the garments have just re- sed by our buyer at the eastern markets at greatly re- All garments are plainly Come early and make.your selection. : a One Group of Dresses Values up to $29.50 at $14.95 One group silk dresses, values up to $35.00, $39.50 and $45.00, at $24.75 Reduced Sizes 16 to 48 One group of,coats and dresses, spe- i cial at this sale at $9.45 | Gerald Beaumonts Drama of the fighting then feed MARJORIE DAW i Scenario by HAROLD SHUMATE 4EW' SEILER ‘Pradurtinn. Ac tion—Thrills—Suspense—Laughter Andy Gump Comedy— “I’m the Sheriff” Fox News DOLLAR DAY! SATURDAY, JUNE 4 MAKE YOUR $ $ DOLLARS $ $ SAVE A DOLLAR AT THE “RED OWL”. Where a Dollar Buys More GROCERIES TOMATOES, hand packed, 12%c quality, 11 cans .. pa PRESERVES, “Temtor” Pure Fruit, $1.25; 4-Ib. jar .... Van Camp's Evaporated MILK Canned Fruit ». 2% large cans Pineapple, crushed or broken sliced Peaches, Apricots, EXTRA SPECIAL 4 == $11 10 scam $l assorted cans P & G SOAP, White Naptha 10 0z.; 26 bars .. SUGAR, fine table granulated 14 Ibs., special, for....... Campbell’s SOUPS Pink Salmon Alaska Pack Ocean Caught All Varieties 6 Tall Ib. cans $ 1. 1 1 Cans for $1 Red Owi Stores «:::, | NOW 91 STORES IN NORTHWEST. CITIES Save | Time GUERNSEY CONSIGNMENT SALE The R. R. V. Guernsey Breeders’ Ass’n will hold their Eighth Annual Consignment Sale of selected Guernseys in the Livestock Pa- vilion - at: the Fair Grounds, Thief River Falls, Minn., June 9, 1927. More than ONE HUNDRED HEAD of pure- bred and high grade Gueraseys have been selected by: the committee from the herds of the 150 members. All cattle are either from state and federal accredited herds or will be tested just be- fore the gale for T. B.. - ; Those Yooking for healthy G oe Se at ea

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