The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 13, 1927, Page 2

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE to death with Birger's' machine gun. The body was found in the field | February 5. | In the meantime, Newman asserted, four of Birger’s henchmen had car- PAGE TWO | Additional Sports * , SUPREMACY ON MONDAY, JUNE 18, 1927 Erbe’s Barber Shop for your! Notice, to members of @ |membership card and button.’ Isaac Walton ue—Call at \ |Erbe’s Barber Shop for your membership card and buttoti. . i —___________ Shatpen your lawn-mowers at Ruder’s Furniture Ex- change. T { [tar meeting tomorrow evening at 8! adapted by Graham Baker frost the Social and : ck in the A. O..U. W. hall. All| Charles Klein play. mbers are urged to be present. — PALACE-MANDAN Lepegpe ee At The Movies Advance reports on the vaudeville | Personal |: a et ae te haniuce ,in Mandan for, Tues: ried Mrs. Price away and. returned ; ; jwith the story of having shot her to sith » good variety of entertainment. | death with four bullets and cast her | .|personation of a Chinese character, |?°¢Y, into the mine shaft. Notice to menibers of the ELTINGE THEATRE |Isane Walton League—Call at A troupe of the interna TANKS BY U. §. TS THREATENED MANY ATTEND Ten Places in American Open Set Aside For Band of | | British ‘Pros’ | New York, “June _13.—(@)—Amer- supremacy on the links, which ite crest last, yeur in! swee hreatening chal the American open | at Oakmont, Pa., June in ting field | y been set aside for a! band of British professionals whose | Invasion has the double objective of | successfully defending the Ryder | team trophy against an | team and of lifting the most ed of American links titles. invader, the powerful hitting eran, Ted Ray, is a former Amer-| jean’ open champion. | Of the many scattering attempts which foreign stars have made to! penetrate the home defenses, only two have been successful. | Ray's triumph seven years ago was the last, terminat w twenty ar stretch during wHich. ho European player was able to break through. The other vietory in 1900 was posted by the great English stylist, Harry Vardon. | The suctess of British forces in| these two campaigns, howe: was | Pronounced, for on ‘both occasions | scompatriots finished in the run-up H. Taylor of England | econd to Vardon in 1900, two strokes behind the winner's score of | 313, while Vardon tied three Amer- players for second place in 1920. | re was one other notable Br invasion in 1913 by Vardon and when two famous overseas players finished in a tie with Francis Ouimet, then a young Boston ama- teur, for first place. To the sur- prise of eritics und a large gallery, Ouimet then proceeded to win the subsequent play-off, showing 72 to| 77 for Vardon and 78 for Ray. * Contrasting with the record of h professionals on this side of Atlonti> zing players abroad stars from this the sti i et. | One | vet- | r, to break the pace for cored in 1922 a - Jim Barnes followed suit in 1925, while Bobby Jones annexed the crown Inst year. “TRAP SHOOT Good Scores Made at Weekly’ Event, Held Sunday at Fort Lincoln {to attend th American | § ANNOUNCE APPROACHING | WED- DING of the Mr. and Mrs. Frank Garnier near Bismarck announce that H wedding of their daughter, Clara Louise, to George Archibald Brown will take place Wednesday, June 22, t St. Mary’s cathedral in San Fran- cisco, Calif, The bride-to-be has made | her home in California for the past) two years. While in Bismarck she| was employed with Armour & Co., and’ has many friends in this com- munity, VISIT HERE EN ROUTE WEST En route to Yellowstone park, Mr. nd Mrs, Frank Dewey of Little Falls, Minn., arrived in Bismarck Sunday for a visit of several days with Mr. und Mrs. V. E. Joslin, 110 Rosser avenue east. Mr. und Mrs. Dewey plan to spend a month in the west, returning home via the Black Hills annual roundup at Belle Fourche, S. D, | VISITS FRIENDS HERE phen T. Monek of Jamestown! he cuest of friends in Bismarck to Dickinson, where h the state Monek is University | eiving his Buch- he will be emp! highway commis a recent gi of North I elor of $ METHODIST MISSIONARY ING | of the Methodist mis-j will meet tomorrow / 30 at the home of} . Church, 502 Eleventh Miss Hardy Jacéson wiil be leader of the meetin; FLAG DAY SALE Members of the Agnes M. .Fort tent No. 3 of the Daughters of Union| Veterans will hold a flag sale on the streets tomorrow in honor of the 150th anniversary of the birth of the} Amer: flag. They will be assisted | in the sale by the Campfire giris. | TIME OF MEETING CHANGED | , The meeting of St. George's guild, | which was previously announced for Thursday, will be indefinitely post- poned, A short business meeting | will be held Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock in the basement of the A. W. Lucas store. VISITS IN SOUTH DAKOTA | Mrs, Myron Cox returned last eve: ning after spending the week-end a the home of her mother in McLaugh- Kn, S. D. She was accompanied to Bismarek by her sister, Miss Ramona McLaughlin, wh spend some time: here, The ladies sionary. socie w. B. AND P. The members of t Professional Women's club will mect ut the club rooms Tuesday evening at 6 o'clock to attend the club picnic. The annual election of officers. will be held at the business meeting after the picnic, . PICNIC Business and RETURN FROM SCHOOL | Misses Florence and Tollie Nelson were the guests of their sister, Mrs. | V. C, Peters, Friday en route to their home at Washburn. The, Misses Nel- son have spent the: past year at the state teachers’ college at Valley City. WILL ATTEND SUMMER SCHOOL Miss Ethel Ehlers, who has been ithe guest of her sister, Miss Adeie Some good scores were made at the trap shoot held Sunday at they {Fort Lincoln grounds, when a large number attended, ent from The score Many were pres- dan, . Db, Sing. Sing. Sing. me fd 10 Hanson t Beattie Ebert : Woodmansce ... en nee 4 2 a 2 Hanselman Spies Adler i6 i2 al 18 13] : Emerson a al Horribin is Steen 13 : ‘President’s Team’ | Seon aa: econ see one ee te Wins in Tourney Members of the ‘president's team” scored a victory over members of the “manager’s team” ina tournament held Satur- | rday at the Country. club. | President's team members won four of the six twosomes played. They | were guests at-dinner of the man- | aneler's team as & result of their vic- tory, ‘the régpits: Olsnes¥itpresident) defeated Si- imons ( wer); Cook (president) defeated Martin Hagen (manager); Sig Hagen (president) won by. de- fault from Heising (manager); Cave | (manager) defeated Lynch (presi- dent); LaFrance (president) defeated Trick (manager) and Baker © (man- “geen defeated: Ermatinger (presi- ident), Paul Cook Beats Ed_ Cox in Golf Match Completing 4 tournament which {was begun on Memorial Day, but which had been delayed from time 2 time, for various reasons, Paul {Cook Sunday won the championship of the first flight from Ed Cox, 3 yand 2. Cook and Cox had won from ‘their respective opponents when the tourney was iy started but their R match for. championship was 4 to Sunday, eae holes | completion, of the first " sore, at Bh ete yo 01 and “had Cook pital Golf club’s | urned in ‘score. under that ra | has been a guest at the E. J. t it | her parents at Underwood. Ehlers, for several day's, left" this morning for Valley City where she will attend summer school at the state teachers’ colege. RETURN TO MINNEAPOLIS Mrs. D. D, Beauman and _ little daughter, June, returned to Minne- anolis this morning after spending few weeks in the city as the guest of | Mrs. Beauman’s mother, Mrs. J. S.| Hanson. | RETURNS FROM. NATIONAL MEETING Miss Helen Katen, state tuberculosis turned Friday tional association Indianapolis, Ind. “from the na- | meeting held at TO WASHINGTON AND PARK Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Shaw of the In- dian School left today for a trip to| points in Washington. and probably | through Yellowstone Park. They pect to be away two months, EN ROUTE TO TRAINING CAMP Russell Haggard of Coleharbor a guest of friends in Bismarck Sun-| day en route to Fort Snelling, where | he will enter the citizen's military | training camp. | RETURNS C. A. Humble of Crosb; home for several days, returned to his home at Crosby Sunday evening. PICNIC POSTPONED The pienie which St. George's Sun- ¢ay school class had planned for Tuesday afternoon has been post- poned to a week from that day. WILL GO TO JAMESTOW Mrs. Ora Morton, national organi: er of the Daughters of Union Veter- | ans, will go to Jamestown tomorrow to organize a tent in that city. MISSIONARY SOCIETY GROUP Rita’s group of the Missionary will meet tomorrow evening jock at the home of Mrs. Paui Cerwinski, 609 Tenth street. TO ATTEND SUMMER SESSION Miss Eloise McKee left this morn- ing ‘Valley -City, where she will attend the summer school session at the state teachers’ college. TO VALLEY CITY Mr. and Mrs..A. L. Overbee and children left Saturday for Valley City, where they will spend several jays, SPENDING VACATION | Miss Anita Schroeder of tlhe Bis- marek hospital is spending her vaca- tion, at her home in Grand Forks. WEEK-END GUEST AT HOME Miss Irene Samuelson of this city, spent the week-end at the PP eee WEEK-END .GUESTS Mr. and Mrs. en of relatives, tis suite, aie, has gone a Hagler te vapend sa. tow ‘meant MEET-|® home of W. E. Purfeerst spent ndat New Salem as the|| known Foster girls make th tion picture debut ‘in Gilda Gray's picture, “Cabaret” at the Eltinge to- day and Tuesday. The girls, ten in number, are from a troupe that is featured in musical comedy, They appear in the picture ag dancers. in the lavish cabaret where Gilda Gray is the sensational chief attraction. the first Foster girls who've danced before a camera, The troupe was brought to the studio by Alan K, Foster, who trains the girls and stages their intricate, zcrobatie dancing numberrs. An en- tirely new routine of dances was worked out for the film. The casting of the Foster girls in “Cabaret” was the occasion of a re- union between Miss Gray and Mr. Foster, They first met y was stage director of the 1919," in which Gilda Gray duced her famous “Shimmy” dance to roadway. featured in “Cabaret,” supporting Miss Gray are Tom Moore and Ches- ter Conklin. Owen Davis wrote the original screen story. Incidenta!l, they CAPITOL THEATRE “The Third Degree,” starring Do- lores Costello, which opens today at the Capitol Theatre, is as gripping a police melodrama as its name sug- gests. ‘the Third Degree!” Words that carry a connotation of horror and miserable injustice; nagging, bully- ing, brow-beating, torture, forced confession: the modern version of Inquisitions. i “third .degree” in , to a large extent, y to more scientific, less d infinitely more accurate hods in police departments. Be- wildered prisoners no longer writhe stool of agony, a blinding light ng their weary eyes, with harsh in the darkness beyond threat- ening, cajoling, insisting, demanding, questioning them until their senses reel and the earth seems to be stag- through voie gering crazily trackless spac Woven around this barbarous in- stitution, with the gay background of a circus, “The Third Degree” re- | veals in a startlingly realistic man- ner the endless. romance, adventure, sacrifice and heartbreak for which it has been responsible. Miss Costello appe: as the wife of a third degree victim. Louise Dresser, as, the mother, is featured in. the, supporting cast, which cludes “Jason Robards, Rockliffe Kate Price and Tem Sant- he Third Deg: | | was}where he was thrown out and shot plays an assortment of odd instru- ments with skill. Macey & Mad line appear in “Freneh’ Dressi a combinatien of comedy. talk;. sin; ing and dancing. Loran Grey & Boys will be scen in a elassy dance revue. A number of pretty draper- ies orm an elaborate setting for this act, which is exceptionally well cos- tumed. Comedy and harmony sing- ing are featured by Devore & Worth, who appear as a sea captain and a funny sailor in “All Hands on Deck.” The Four Chesters, two men and two Indies, are a feature cireus act, and present tight wire accomplishmen consisting of dancing and athlet feuts. Betty Bronson and Ricardo Cortex are featured in “The Cat’s Pajamas,” the screen play for the evening. odore Roberts,-long absent from $ereen, also:is in the cast of this comedy drama entertainment, RECOVERY OF WOMAN'S BODY - PROVES STORY firs, Price’s Body Found in Mine Shaft Where Newman Said It Was Thrown Marion, I body of Mrs. Lory L. Price, who, with her husband, a state highway patrol- man, was. siain by gangsters lust January 18, was found today in’ the abandoned coal mine shaft near here in which Art Newman, former Jieu- tenant of | Charles Birger, gang leader, declared it had been. buried. The body was removed and identified positively by Sheriff Oren Coleman as that of the missing woman, Discovery of the. body, after three days digging, tended to corroborate Newman's story that Birger, New- man and six, other “gangsters went to Price’s home tht” night of Janu- ary 17, and abducted and killed the couple, ; Birger, Newman declared, shot Price three times at the barbecue stand at Birger’s “Shady Rest” ren- dezvous and then Price, still aliv was- carried to @: field near. Duboi Vacation Bound With The Best Foot Forward You are on your way, to Europe, the seashore or summer resort. tume, a prett; to the consi than anything you may youthfulness of design, appropriateness and io matter what your cos- foot will be a greater passport ration and attention due you wear. For magic price our vacation selection of shoes is un- equalled. 4 ve Se acl . An Invitation to Bismarck Women TO ATTEND THE COOKING SCHOOL Beginning tomorrow afternoon and continuing Wednesday, promptly at 2 p. m. each afternoon at the Consolidated Utili Tuesday Orange Joy Salad Croquectte Biscuits Custard Pie Broadway. Mrs. Brownwell, special ‘demonstrator of the Corn Products Refining Co., will pre- pare an entirely new menu each day. Here are the menus for the four days PROGRAM FOR FREE COOKING SCHOOL | Wednesday Mazola. Mayonnaise “ Mazola Salad Dressing Dressing Lemon Queens Corn Meal Muffins Thursday Complete. Oven Dinner. Vegetables Dessert Friday Micaroni Porcupine ee Spice Cake, .. French Fried Potatoes Thursday and Friday, ities Co. office at 504 Saturday, Special Menus Requested : Help Your Church to Get This New Reliable Gaé Range! The church having the greatest percentage of their ladies in attendance for the four days of the cooking school Lorain equipped will be given. a, new: reliable Angliron Gas Range, Churches having a membership of 100 or ovér afé éligible for this contest We.offer you this portuni- ty .to. learn’ more ab Reliable Gas Range with rain, Red Wheel. You'll appreciate the beaut tthe Lo. of, new 1927 Reliable models. They’re sturdily built, easy ta. keep clean and, best of all, they’re all that their. name implies. i im Reliable ovens. and _broile have _, rust f The lers Loraii fet Wheel is 4 cated at the front of the oven for conv. n © Reli with CORAIN: and space o% re oe eee ee in015200-4 & eg TUESDAY PALACE THEATRE - MANDAN SAM LEE in “Oriental Musical’ Novelty” MACEY. & MADELEINE in “French Dressing” LORAN GREY & BOYS in “A Classy Dance Revue” DEVORE & WORTH in “All Hands on Deck” FOUR CHESTERS “A Party on the Line” ON THE SCREEN BETTY BRONSON and | THEODORE ROBERTS “The Cat’s Pajamas” Comedy—“Auntie’s Ante” CABARET Bind CHESTER CONKUA QO Paramount Pidure News Pictures COMEDY “CIRCUS CAPERS” 8:15. & 10:15. Bismarck. Time 4 a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday + Thursday and’ Saturday Heart River Pavilion _ \Mandan Music by The Commodor 6-piece Orchestra Special balloon dance Thursday with dollar bills given away in ball 8 Free daricing from nine to nine-thirty every night the pound in “CLOVERDALE.” Mandan Creamery & Produce Co. ; ‘Mandan, N. Dak. -- BABY CHICKS — Reduced June and July Prices . Prompt shipment, 100% guarantee prepaid to you Leghorns. or. Ancon so i *sia00. "ae AB new e eens A of Barred, White, Buff Rocks ..... ” Rose cr Single comb Reds ...... White aS L. qiinedoties en Buff or.White Or, ington: - : Black Minorcas bi . Brahmas or. White Minorcas. ..:. ‘Black Langshans, Jersey Giants ) $15-00 Heavy Mixed ‘for broilers ...... $9.00 $43.00 (Lots of 25 or, 50 Clicks alld 50¢ extra) WIRE, PHONE or WRITE AT ONCE Rust’s Hatchery B, $12.00 = $55.00 = $100.00 ) ) ) ) ) ) ) $ 85.00

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