The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 3, 1927, Page 8

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- CAGE EIGHT, 24 KIWANIANS -| OF CARRINGTON "DINNER GUESTS | Meet With Local Club Last ! Night; George Shafer Is | Principal Speaker ' i Carrington Kiwanians were feted | here last night by the Bismarck | Kiwanis club when the two chapters | heid a joint meeting. | Twenty-one of the Carrington men | made the trip to Bismarck. They | ed at dinner at the hotel and a program | a ran : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Navy Airman Wins Death Gamble ton where they will spend thelr va- They’re Hiking cation ‘at the Joseph Kautzman bome. VISITS FRIENDS Miss Margaret Smith has returned fom Beulah where she, spent’ the ist week as the guest of friends, WITH RELATIVES | Dr, and Mrs. W.°C, Aylen left Mon- | day for Fargo where they will spend several days with relatives. RETURNS HOME Mrs. J. J. Gogerty returned home Monday from Akron, Ohio, and St. Paul, where she has been the guest | of relatives for the past three weeks. | UNDERGOES OPERATION Miss Iva McMaster of Sanger re- cently underwent an operaion for ap-' pendicitis at the Deaconess hospital. | Local Man’s Dahlias | Set Record for Size O NMOLSONNO, to See Coolidge en and during the summer womey wear furs, says Dr. W. M. Thompson, missionary to that country 37 years. French Aviator to Start Suit Against Charles A. Levine Paris, Aug. 8.—()—Maurice Drou- hin, French aviator, has had papers drawn up for a suit designed to com- pel Charles A. Levine tf fulfill the terms of their: tentative contract, signed early in July, and to sign a final agreement as provided in the first arrangement. _ Drouhin is the aviator chosen by Levine to pilot the latter’s monoplane Columbia in a return Atlantic flight 0 New York. ISTIC CHAIR Embatass, Wis.—()—John Krub- sack bent the twig — and a comfort- able cl By gr of 32 box elder saplings trained the trees to grow in the form of a chair. It took 11 years of the “tree chair” for $4,000. DR. R. 8. ENGE Examination Free Lucas Bik, Bismarck, N. D Real.Hop Malt Syrup °‘ vas, presented by members of both | clubs. Here from Carrington were Collins, an Martens Putnam, L. Goss, J. S han, Dahlias grown by Dr. Ay O. Hend- j erson of this city are believed to set | a record for size this early in the! season. The blooms are five anda! ‘|half inches across and, according to local fanciers, are unusually large | for this time of year, most dahlias not blooming until later. Dr. E. P. Quain Gives | Interesting Report On Rotary Meeting Dr. E. P, Quain addressed the Ro- tary club this noon with an interest- ing account of his trip to Ostend, tance to all are to be taken up, the) Belgium, where he attended the In-jattendance of every one who possibly ternational convention of Rotary. cun is urged by Mr. Lee. The address covered entertaining and a instructive details which Dr. Quain Rail Workers Get Increases in Wages noted from the time of sailing from! New York until the convention ad-/ journned. le HL, Dobler was chairman of the| Pppstcat tte BLT on New York, Aug. 3,—4/P)—Represen- Woche nat Wikies, nik eametns | tnivee of the Brotherhood of Loco- Ce pied ace) imotive Engineers and 54’ eastern Locket of |, Minneapolis, | William y.jlroads today signed, after media- f tion by the United States boards of mediation, an agreement for a seven and one-half per cent increase, that, according to previous estimates, will Fricke of Baldwin, Roy of Dickinson, Victor Moynier of - Bis-| involve an increase of $6,500,000 an- nually. marck, Dr. R. S. Krause of Bismarck,’ Raymond Schumacker of Buffalo, The engineers had asked for a 15 per cent wage inerease. Appeal was Minn. and C, E, Chabot of San Diego, Calif, were the geusts at the Rotary made to the board of mediation after the representatives of the raliroads luncheon this noon, and engineers failed to reach an These three;boy scouts, with all $18 and their camping equipment. have stat ‘@- 3000<mile hike from Youngstown,O., to visit their chief, President* Coolidge, .in the Black Hills, Left to right they are Maryan Vaitekunas, 14; Charles Stricklin, 15, and; Paul Beckman, 15. . H. Martin eihart, Nels Kunkel, Ben Russell Andrews,’ Bob| H. L. Minter. General George Shi the principal speaker of the eveni talked on Kiwanis as a factor for i Durrant, traffic commissioner of the Grand Forks Commercial club. This |meeting, Mr. Lee pointed out, is not | for members of the Farmers | agreement by arbitration. The agreement follows increases granted to the firemen after mediation and to trainmen, conductors, baggage and flagmen after arbitration. ————* ig Police Court | in Dealers association, but for y farmer gnd grain shipper in th rritory.. As matters of impor- so far, the organization had devoted | mainly to building within the! the mmunities in| y are lo great | building through interco: munity efforts, | “Such meetings as this one,” he said. “furnish an opportunity for the leading s of one .community to visit her and gain a_ better idea of what their neighbors are do- ing.” | .-rom, Moran of Bismarck was fined $5 and costs when he apneared be- fore Judge J. M. Belk yesterday to lead guilty to a charge of drunk and disorderly conduct. The fine was suspended on payment of the costs. MOST NORTHERLY SCHOOL Khe, Siberia — The world’s most northerly situated school has opened in this village, 400 north of the Arctic circle, The pu- pils are mostly of the Yakut and Samoyed tribes. | Throughout the year they attend their lessons clad in reindeer skins. NO SUNSTROKE IN BRAZIL Roanoke, Va-—Despite high tem- peratures in northern Brazil. sun- strokes are unheard of, meat is eat- Should Enlarge Horizon We all, he said, should enlarge our} horizon and recognize that our in- terests lic not only in our own local- ity, but all over the state, and that the interests other people in oth- er parts of the state have are our interests. “No longer, in a few yeurs, will we have the snirit of ‘the dog in the manger’ which now exists between some communities,” he said, and wer. | o-? need ~~" a ane one” @ LANDS ypsarery % e aa. sae ‘The end of another thrilling ‘aviation exploit is pictured here. The Grain Men, Farmers tiny Wright Apache biplane shown above, resting in a cabbage patch To Meet at De near Washington, was landed safely there by Lieut C. C, Champicn, U. §. Navy flyer, after flames and an cxploding motor had imperiled Lake Next Tuesday Grand Forks, N. D., Aug. 3.—(@)— life at an altitude of seven miles. At the left is Champion, still ed in the stuffy garb he wore as a protection rege extreme cae The sketch depicts just what happened. Champion had a parachute, r a but refrained from jumping because he wanted to save the instruments ea dekh oe Ne uate which recorded the height he had reached. Fire swept about the noeehauntern reed OE North De wrecked motor at times during Champion's descent, but he blew it iyota has been called by the North Dakota Far Grain Dealers asso- ciation and will be held in Devils out by side’slipping. ES E SEWGES a ——=—=ae§ | Lake at 8 o'clock next Tuesday after- noon, it was announced here this M | N S F |mprning by P. A. Lee, secretary of yas any for this terirtory. The cam- tern North Dakota is unneces- } dered, IS DISCUSSED said, since the average farm| The grain rate structure will be the association. in this territory is not yet large reviewed for the assemblage by T. A. Pharmacists Hear Rex Wil- ‘The meeting has been arranged for | enough, 3 lard Talk on Agricultural the purpose of familiarizing Other speakers were Dr. M. M. Ful- \ ; : Quickrelieffrom painful i { corns, m3 Conditions in State sayktarkoss N Lettie Union ; : Budwelser Real Hop Malt Syrup is one . ’ on. For it’s'a Northern ed with a plea for greater under- standing and greater friendliness} emong all the sections of the state. [hi Paul Nagel snoke for the Carring-| on, ton club, telling of the pleasure its) members had experienced in coming! to Bismarck. Christian Dick sang several solos and A. L. Morris, band--+ master at Carrington, played several cornet numbers, Ruth Gordon and Marjorie Kennedy played Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2, by Franz Liszt. SIX ARE HURT IN AUTO CRASH Minneapolis Man, Wife and Three Daughters, In Acci- dent With Truck Quality Merchandise Fair Prices You'll do best at Kennelly’s SPECIAL. | Four Piece Bed Room Suite Two Piece Living Room Suite Eight Piece Dining Room Suite Three Room: Outfit, Gomplete. co. sg ies Sees aly hor 70 years! Eten acer eters ae a can, . ou'l find ite worthy Sf the name you see on the label. ; ie afiliond y) ANHEUSER-BUSCH, St: Louis , %» Gamble-Robinson Fruit Co. Distributors Bismarck, N. Dak. ¥ , . Steele, N .D., August 3.—(Special to the Tribune)—Six people were in- jured in a head-on automobile crash near here yesterday afternoon. J. H. Thomas of Minneapolis, his young daughters, who were riding in one car, received bruises and cuts. Ludvig Peterson, in an oil tank truck, was scratched and bruised. The accident happened on the north side of the Northrn Pacific track, one-half mile west of Steele. Thomas was driving east when he was struck by Peterson's truck. Dust Obscures Vision Both cars were upset and turned | completely around. Peterson claims the dust of another car obscured his vision. Thomas, going about 30 miles an hour, saw the truck and said he thought it would stop. They crashed head-on. Peterson was thrown from his | truck, the force of the impact smash- | ing the cab. The damage to Thomas’ car was estimated at $250. grain men and farmers with all de- ton of Moorhead, who spoke on “Nar- ass tender toes and tails of present freight rates and to cotics,” and Charles E. Sanders of Dt Scholfs point out to them what may be ex- pected in this section from the grain § Minneapolis, speaking “Retail | Sales Merchandising.” The president's ball was held at the Elks’ hall in the evening. ; A dialogue “Merchandising,” given by E. J. Knowles ‘of Minnea- polis and C. Reinhold Noyes of St. aul, was a feature of the program s "morning. Comniittee wife and three on Farm problems in North Dakota and the agricultural outlook of th state were discussed Tuesday befor members of the North Dakota Phar- | macists’ association here by Rex E. | Willard of the state agricultural col- lege, Fargo. Mr, Willard said that the outlook ‘or North Dakota ag ults, outlook || Personal and culture. is good ns at present. ‘The wheat ero should || Social News of comma at 8 ces Piet the market as it did last year, while|| Mandan Vicinity | o—______—_—__—+ farmers should get good prices for | other commodities. The egg, dairy | and poultry market now, he said, is| SPENDS WEEK-END AT GLENDIVE going through its annual slump, but| R, B. Cummins has returned from ‘should return to normal this fall and, Glendive where he spent the week- winter, as has been the rule in the jend with Mrs. Cummins, who is the Railroad Officials paWillard pointed out that the iaisg ot Oe 2 ct this yea as the any Are Visitors Here age in its hi wheat acreage in its history that he felt wheat was as safe a crop R. W. Clark, newly appointed gen- eral traffic manager of the Northern Paci railroad; L. R. Capron, freight traffic manager; E. F. son, assistant passenger tra’ an- ager, and L. R. Challoner, assistant general freight agent, visited Bis- marck yesterday, The party was en route to the Pa- cific coast on an inspection trip of the road. It was Mr. Clark's first official trip since his appointment as general traffic manager. Members of the party spent the entire day in Bismarck, going from here to Billings and Butte. Fargo « Ready food fr loafing days ~ SHREDDED ee Dispatch to Nogales, Ariz, Herald, : Bt | , says 60 Mexican federal ” soldiers killed, many wounded in battle with rebels in state of Jalisco. Carol, in Paris, writes article in 4 of father, which students of Se yamine saict’nd ceieiees| CSP-delicious-healthful shreds |} Capital Funeral ry reports are due this afternoon and the annual’ banguet vill be held at the Lewis and Clark hotel this evening. VULCANIZING Tires and Tubes, Oil and Grease |; Auto Accessories Phone 944 Bismarck Accessory & Tire Co. Next-to First Guaranty Bank ib SA tN An elegent Suite of Combination, Walnut and Gum in the Dull Antique finish. A Fuil Vanity with Bench, Chest of Drawers and full-size Bow-end Bed. and Wait Have Your Shoes Resoled THE NEW WAY VULCANIZED Instead of Nailed on Guaranted to HOLD and no SQUEAK Put the SOLE in the Same CONDITION as when NEW Ladies’ half sole, $1.10 ubber heels. 40¢ Capital Shoe Hospital “Jake Gardner, Prop. 413 Broadway ‘Special attention given to mail orders TO. SYKESTON Miss Rose Brucker and Miss Alfre- da Gussner left Tuesday for Sykes- Puts Automatic ‘ Hot Water Service ‘In Your Home ‘Now you can have a PERFECT hot water service—automatic, dependable, economical—and enjoy its great con- venience while you pay. : With this system in the home there’s nothing to do but turn the faucet! Plenty of hot water is always ready for any ~ Purpose.’ And it supplies het water at a saving while it conserves time and elimi- nates annoyances/ You never forget. You never wait. a Installed and Ready for Use Now Only $110 - 10 Months to Pay MORTICIAN AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR Parlors 210 Fifth Phone 687-W Living.Room Suite of Rich Angora Mohair ‘brocaded. “The suite consists of Large comfortable Davenport and Wing Cijairs. Finely Designed and Well Constructed. For any summer meal with milk. icy > ly Complete nourishment withoutcooking i Sir ores Paish, economist, in _ address before League of Nations union at Oxford, England, predicts economic crash unless America stops granting large credit abroad. Minot.— Dr. H. Kornmesser of Jamestown was elected president of North Dakota Optometric association and Jamestown chosen for 1928 con- vention. Phone Day or Night—22-W Jos. W. Tschamperiia AY Prop. Silane ceatatent | system fort easy to own. Call or ‘phone, XE andges Ding re Bete eo hse ti ning su: bu es long. - Table 46x60, inches and extends to Tinta Built « Walnut'fn Combination with Gum, Beit Cee i] YOUR HOME SHOULD COME-FIRST. Furniture Co. your old furnituré beanie | : Paul C. Remington New Loan Plan On improved City and Farm Pro| Low interest rate and peeked peiloge Bismarck and Mandan Oftice, City’ Ins ‘ 1 Vee ee AT oe a » Minneapolis—Grace Pullman, 17, daughter of Roy Pullman of Minnea- | was killed when she pet | er | nd fell down flight of stairs at jome, Minnéapolis— Board of hia. SEacemmeek te district, sonrt, that Y Catey, accused of attacking a Harr; Schults, was sane. Lesusur. Minn—Clarence Miller, 45) was killed when he was kicked ‘in eee ’ We take im Mba ce MRCS sry eh RS a esc

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