The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 20, 1927, Page 2

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“PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE a oe RULON MADE Home Again, Famous Now! LEGION HEAD Jamestown Man Elected Com-' mander of State Department | —Hold Many Offices | Fargo, N. D., July 20.—(@—A. | J. Rulon, Jamestown, was elected commander of the North Dakota department of the American Legion at the concluding se n today, of what officers of the legion declared was the most successful convention from every viewpoint ever held in the state. Mr. Rulon, as well as being a rominent member of the North ta Legion, is president of the , K association of the state, a member of the state legislature and holds many offices in other organ- izations. He succeeds Earle Sarles | of Hillsboro as commander. Other Officers Chosen Other officers named by the le- | gion today are: Harry Hart, view commander, succeeding W. ! Cole, Bismarck; Jack Williams, rargo, re-elected department ad- ; Leroy R. Baird, Dickin 1 finance officer; Will Lisbon, re-elected histor Pp Father John ) Charles Lano, Mine orge Blan N alem; H. F. Jahoda, Lidger- und O. C, Hovind, Bottineau, ‘s to the national conven- Paris; George Lindow, alternate delegate. | ‘The off f national committee- | min, held by William Stern, Fargo, ( holds over for another year. | All of the officers were elected by unanimous ballot, following the! annual Pembina county caucus held! in the American Legion hall, Eargo, | Tuesday night. is _com- prises the smaller posts of the| state, augmented-by some of the} larger posts. T. Ej Whelan | permanent chairman of the caucus. lend in the nictures above tell the flyers are shown as they arrived arom co to Monoluiu. off for Hawaii himself next day, is right is Mayor James Rotary Club Hears About Hotel Business’ - In the lower picture Ernie Smith, who took ROTEL EMEA | Hel i | | The ‘above cut .shows the Bismarck j municipal pool. The crowd of | youngsters and older people gathered {around indicate that the pool is onc of the most popular features of the |city. It is snonsered by. the, local Elks lodge. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Huff left Sun- day for a two weeks’ trin to Yel- lowstone Park, They will return home by way of the Black Hills. FROM SOUTH DAKOTA abelle Weiger of Webster, the city as a guest at the D. E. M. Steinbrueck home. Local Banks Take Up Water Bonds Devils Lake, N. D., July 20.—) —Bidding interest rates at four and one half per cent, with a premium practically amounting to $250, the First National and Ramsey County National banks of this city bidding jointly, last night were awarded the $50,000 water bond issue by the city commission. Four Twin City houses offered bids of four and Hegenberger’ (left) and Mait- story better than mere words. The in San Francisco after the flight shaking hands with Maitland. To the Rolf of San Francisco. i ing the hotel business of | y with that of the early days, pitchers, kerosene lamps, 3, Jc Peterson ad-; the Rotary club this noon; wt 1 interesting account of the; progress of this business. Mr./ Peterson said that between 20 and} | Notes On European Travel By George D. Mann three quarters per cent each, with premiums ranging from $10 to $555 jbut because of the local banks’ low rate of interest and the provision that they will accept the bonds only as the city cares to issue them on estimates for work done, the Devils 25,800 transients registered at the | Grand Pacific during the year. He| --¢2.ulso* gave his hearers ah idea of the service required by modern standards and competition. J.-P. French spoke briefly upon his extended motor trip which he recently took to the east coast! states, The musical program was played by Adolph Engelhardt accompanied | 2 a Miss Ruth Rowley. Guests at --the luncheon were Frank Farring- ton of Augusta, Maine; Otto.Bauer <sf. Mandan; August E. Johnson, Ole-Stefferud, and W. J. Bickert of Washburn; Rev. John Wright of Editor’s Note: This is the third of a series of articles upon European impressions. The writer and his family are on a sixty day motor trip along the highways and by-ways of the Old World. stown, Ir nd, eltered basin of ten square miles is one of the finest harbor: the United Kingdom, Our first view of Ireland’s green.bills,.and they are a vividegreen, was at dawn on the ‘ourth of Jul: It is a peculiar feel- ing to be a alien on alien soil upon such a day. This sleeping port of Erin sparkled like a |, as the first rays of sun shot over the tur- rets of the ancient forts of Spike, Haulbowline and = Roe! Island. There was no activity di rnible ex- cept the belated pilot, who had kept the giant Cunarder cooling its heels the harbor for three hours. Queen: ma; and Miss Ruth Rowley and Adolph Engelhardt of Bismarck. ‘Cloudy Tomorrow’ | Is Forecast Given .,uv and down his bridge and cursed the tardy escort as he did Flare e and siren calls failed to \ y pilot. He came when he to guide the s yal Mail into the basin, w tenders awaited to carry those pas- engers bound for a tour of the Emerald Is} Americans in little grou “The Star Spangled Banne the Stars and Stripes in commemoration of the Fourth of July. An Irish bugler, with a facial hue as brilliant as a boiled lob: deck of the tender ankee Doodle” “At last! relief has come in sigh We can shout, with much de- | light. This vorrid day is nearly done; Fs Tomorrow, there'll be clouds, less | sun. Which, more or less poetically speaking, means that the forecast is “Part cloudy and somewhnt unset- | tled tonight and Thursday.” Hettinger took the hign tempera. ture crown yesterday, with the m cury reaching a maximum of 86. Bis marek remained in its half-way po- _.sition, the maximum reading being 75. NEWS BRES | oe - ————--—¢ Eighteen year old: boy passenger killed and pilot seriously hurt,.hen | airplane crashes on roof of building it Brockport, N. Y. ps sang * waved luted it and and who love the poetry of Francis Mahoney will remember his references to the River Lee: “On this I ponder Where’er I wander And thus grow fonder, Sweet Cork, of thee— With thy bells of Shandon, That sound so grand on The pleasant water Of the River Lee.” Six men, charged with floggin, £5 Charles Hicks, ure ncquitted at'Or jando, Fla; grand jury at Oneonta, Ala, indicts seven men for participa- » tion in flogging of youth, Queenstown was also the home of | Reverend Charles Wolfe, who wrote whil@jthe impatient captain walked | i} Fei jittle glimpse of Ireland was ¢ Reports received in Vera Cruz from = Puerto Mexico attribute shooting of S. Consul Chapman to anarchist. ~-.Chapman says he had asked ~olice S“pratection ‘because of axitation against impending execution of Sacco and Vanzetti. Rapid City, & D—Mrs. M. G. It Hagen of Fa: N. D., and her moth- = er, Mrs. M. Bannerman of Minneap- z= olis, were killed, when their auto- $= mobile slipped off road and went = over 800 foot cliff, about a mile from == Summer White House. Grand Forks—George Dui rand Forks was reelected pres: chion, wulch Culteiasted copapeign to “oust old board after ‘tudante, strike. matee trouble pat infary ‘whe two oc- whom. is pregioctisy to ter cere sly inji ‘ina fire whieh the Svea hotel here Eskos Corne of St. Paul ‘was forced to hers, without eupants. sen| Tuesday | dent: and 'N. the “Burial of Sir John Moore,” a stirring piece that illumined the oft | too dull pages of the school readers a few decades ago. The entrance to this port is strong- ly fortified, and the barracks are oc- Lake institutions were awarded the : bonds. cupied by convicts and‘ ordnance ‘ Not fur away is the castle; stown, now in ruin: in} Albany, N. ¥., July 20.—(>)— The woman, whose fo it| Legality ‘of the sale of two nem was, is reported to have paid the) brandt paintings to Joseh EF. Wid workmen in goods and made enough! ner, Philadelphia art collector, w: profit from this medium of exchange | upheld today by the c to practically cover the expense of! The court denied the the castle's construction. So tradi-|Youssoupoff, a Russian and former tion refers to the castle as having| owner of the paintings, that-he had cost only a grout. bi defrauded in th le. From” Queenstown the _tourist| P00" @efrauded in their sale ikes out for Cork, then Blarne Castle to kiss “the stone of stones. |He will also hear the bells of Shan- |don in St. Ann's Church. An Irish priest from St, Louis, standing near |me on deck, returning to his native! |heath, hummed tunes reminiscent of jhis boyhood days spent in this | vicinity. | The tender was loaded to the guards. with students, old men re- turning for a last view of their birth some so feeble that they could ly crawl down the gangplank, Within the last two years, the | great steamship companies have in- [troduced a “tou class, which is between second and third class. Stu- dents i) themselves of tl rate, which is only 35 pounds from New York and return or $175 in American money. Accommmodations are not bad and the food very good. More than 100 tourists were going on a specially conducted tour of Ireland, and the glee with which they bounded on the tender’s deck was ample proof |that the voyage so far was a great | TO KEEP PAINTINGS PRI enough to awaken a real interest in the island and a hope at some future | time to tour its scenic places. But the | Samaria steamed out of the harbor shortly after 8 a. m. and pointed its! nose toward the coast of-Wales. The | crew was cursing the Irish pilot, for it meant another night on the liner id one day less with their families in Liverpool before the steamer makes its return trip to New York. Americans who had expected to cele- | brate a portion of the Fourth in Lon don were disappointed too. The ship docks late tonight and early Tuesday !morning the ‘tour of Englamd and) Scotland will begin. , | But it will bé long béfore the pret- ty green hills of Ireland dotted with miniature farms—miniature to one used to thinking in terms of sections | of land—fade from memory. Little! | wonder the Irish love it so mych and fight over it so much. Doris Brough: Michael Novak, Florence Wilson, Mary Ben: Winnie Sorel 'alke: cs Fleming, } Lorraine Edith Hedges, wonderind | Man the food value the human race. News dan FORKERS 10 BE HOSTS T0 MEET Will Entertain N. D. Trap- shooters’ Association at 1928 Convention Grand Fesks, home of J. B. Troeh, i of. both meeting late noon, =” : Murtey ‘Woods was elected *. Duii joi secretary-trea: All are from Grand Forks. . » Minot, won. the event, scoring 92 out of 100, al || Personal and '| Social News of || Mandan Vicinity | —_—_———+ GUESTS AT BRINK HOME Mr. and Mrs. C, S. Brink have as | their guests. Mrs. E. Cast of Chi- cago, Miss Blanche Frey of Terre Haute, Ind., and Miss Hilda Quinn of Litchfield, Minn. RETURNS FROM FARGO Mrs_ William Fristad has returned from Fargo where she has been the guest of her daughter, Mrs. L. C. Peterson, for some time. HOME FROM VACATION Miss Esther Holland returned. Mon- day from Lake of the W: pone she spent a two we ‘ion. Fe aoe TAKE MOTOR TRIP : Mr. and » John Heater and Mr. oo ney be hregyrnlag a this morn- Bleek ists, tay inna Spr Therm: » a through dd Pee {> ‘ Esther Smith, T: ‘Anna Healy, Mc Cube, Del. Frances McGue, Huati ‘Weir, Fatgo, i Northfield, Vermont the Niagara Regigin seeing all the sights of this Of Ameen cacy shee faweed bolton of the whole wheat " ASK YOUR ABOUT Grocers Phone 800 eee 1 |Many Take Part in Contest, Sponsored By Elks—Rib- bons Are Awarded : Boy anf girl swimmers of Bis- marck had their day yesterday when the first of a series of weekly atic events, sponsored by the lo: Elks lodge, was held at the mu- nicipal pool. Ribbons were awarded winners of first, second and third places. Results in the various entries wer s follows: Long plunge. Boys 1 or under, George Moses, first; Lloyd Murphy, secon rls 13 or unde Erma Barl Ethel Sandin second; Vivian Coghlan, third. Twenty yards free style. or under, Lloyd Murphy, George Mi i third. first; R. Wenzel, Dale Brown. or under, Natalie Barbie, Sarah Cleveland, C. Gray. Boys 16 or over. Don Kenniston, Fritz Schrimpf, Earl Hoffman, | Twenty yards on back, Boys 13 or under, L. Murphy, George Moses, E. Anderson. Barbie, E. Sandin, V. Coghlan. 115 or under, Brown, L. Murphy, y. Kraft. Girls 15 or under, N. Barbie, Sarah Cleveland, L. Olson. Rovs 16 or over, John O'Hare, Don Kenniston, F. Landers, ‘Twenty ‘yards on back, using legs only. Boys 13 or under, Bud Bar- rett, L. Murphy, E. Anderson. Girls 13 or under, E. Sandin, V. Coghlan Boys 15 or under. D. Brown, W. |Krort, R, Wenzel. Boys 16 or over, D. Kenniston, John O’Hare, E. Hoff- man, Forty yards free style. Boys 15 Kraft, R. Wenzel, D. is 15 or under, L. Olson, . Gray. Boys 16°or over. John O'Hare, Girls Boys Fritz Boys 16 or for the best essays on SHREDDED WHEAT Out of two hundred thousand school children of Asierica who ‘wrote essays on Shredded Wheat were selected as prize winners. These, with their teachers, are entitled to free trips from their homes to Niagam Falls and “The Home of Shredded Wheat.” crs Benoa Ronpe, Le. the following twenty je, N.Y. W.Va. nett, Bedford, Moore, Tekamoh, Nebe. becker Brose, haces NL iraham, Cameroa, fll,’ Dakota masd for essays Dpisianthe food suaple ot —> Girls 13 or under, E.| { loses. second; W. Shephard, | | | a. # ea gah + ‘or formation First of Weekly Aquatic Events d at Municipal Swimming Pool aver, Fred Landers, D. Kenniston, Hoffman, High diving. Boys 13 or unde Murphy, Shepherd, Ulsrud. or under, Brown, Smith, Murph Girls 13 or under, Sarah Clevelan Boys-16 or over, O'Hare, LaVin Brown. Shallow diving. Boys 13 or under, Murphy, Shepherd, Barrett. Boys or under, D, Brown, F. Smith, Mu phy. iand, Boys 16 or over, Kennisto O'Hare, Smith. Swan diving. Shepherd, Murphy, . Drennen. or ander, Sarah Cleveiand. y diving, LaVine, Kennisto . Smith. Boys 15 Girls 13 or under, Sarah Cleve- Boys 13 or under, Boys ‘9 or under, brown, Smith, Murphy. iP HONE HELPS Capital Funeral , TOHALT FIRE) rarer nai | Licensed Embalmer Its Ringing Wakens Mrs. J. L.| | Phone Day or Night—22-W Bankston—She Discovers The ringing of a telephone bell ' fat the home of J. L. Bankston: | |yesterday afternoon resulted ‘in probably preventing it from being | destroyed by flames. . | Mrs. Bankston said she was | |sleeping when the. telephone rang. |She went out into the hall to an-| | swer it and noticed clouds of smoke |eddying down from the attic. She | Jat once notified the fire .depart- | ment. |_ The smoke was so thick, Mrs. |* | Bankston ie that she had to get ; out of the house from a porch on} the second story. In attempting xe) extinguish flames in the basement, she thrust her hand through a pane of glass and painfully injured it. | |. ‘the cause of the fire was not known, It is believed to have started simultaneously in the base- | ment and attic of the house. Little *!damage was done, due to qui r,; Work by the city fire department. Day Phone 246 Night Phones 246-887 5 VULCANIZING . Tires and Tubes, Oil and Grease Auto Accesyories Phone 944 Bismarck Accessory & Tire Co. Next to First Guaranty Bank . CONDUCTS ORCHESTRA | ry ie, New York, July 20.—()—Fritz Busch, who will make his American | debut in March as guest conduetor of | the New York Syniphony orchestra, | has been a conductor since he was 19 years old. At the age of 36, he now | is. director of the Dresden Opera! House. His first New York appear-| ance will be on March 10. W. E. Perry MORTICIAN AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR Parlors 210 Fifth Phone 687-W r ny ny Notice to All . Hudson and Essex Owners You are cordially invited to call at our place of business so that we may properly enter your name on our Service Reg- ister. Full line of new We are organized to give Service That Satisfies. 1928 Hudson and Essex models now on display. ’ Super Six Motors, Inc. Bismarck, N. Dak. = that Commands Attention! Your printing ness prospects. ship, it’s an unsatisfactory job. often introduces you to your best busi-_ If it fails to make .an. acquaintance- In our plant—well equipped to handle this sort of work —you will receive printing that commands instant at- tention—and keeps it. a With this efficient work—the result of years of experi- ence—you are schedule time: 4 certain to have the job corroleted on

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