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anmmpecore en PAGE FOURTEEN 29 BIRTHS, 20 DEATHS IN CITY DURING JULY Parents cf 21 Babies Live in Bismarck—Others Else- where in State enty-nine births occurred in ‘k during the month of July, ich 18 were boys and 11 girls, according to the records on file in the office of City Auditor M. H. Atkinson, Parents of 21° of the new arriv while the elsewhere e state. Twenty deaths occurred in the city during the same period, seven of them being Bismarck residents while the others ided elsewhere. Births and deaths for the month, ne shown by the records, were as BIRTHS July 2 Mr. and Mrs.’Louis W. Page, Pl- |} follows: |] bowoods, a son. Jul To Mr. and M | dahl, Bismarck. = To Mr. and } son, McKenzie, Halvor F. Pear- on, ly 8 To Mr. and Mrs. Weigelt Joseph,| Napoleon, a so} To Mr. ani A. L. Hendrick- son, Bismarck, on, July 9 mee Mr..and Mrs. George Fix, ismagck; a son. i July 10 To Mr. and Mrs. Curtis G. Thorn- ton, Bismarck, a son. July 11 To Mr. and Mrs. Harvey T. Gray Bismarck, a son. July 12 To Mr. apd Mrs. Frederick 1. Harrington, a daughter. Suly 13 To Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Wm. Patzman, Bismarck, a son. July 15 To Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Albrecht, Bismarck, a daughter. July 16 To Mr. and Mrs. Nick Barbie, Bismarck, a daughter. To Mr. and Mrs. Wendline J. Haman, Bismarck, a daughter. To Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Robert Yeater, Bismarck, a son. july 17 To Mr. and Mrs. Theo. P. Shel- don, Bismarck, a son. July 19 To Mr. and Mrs. Finess Powell, Steele, a daughter. July 20 To Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman Dohn, Bismarck, a daughter. July 21 To Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Ress- » | Bride, Lehr, a son. July 22 To Mr. and Mrs. John Zacharia Daniel, Bismarck, a son.’ To Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. P. Schlaemer, Bismare To Mr. and Mrs. marck, a daughter. To Mr. and Mrs. Raymond G. McLaughlin, Bismarck, a son. July 24 To Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Heidt, Bismarck, a son, To Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Berg, Wil- ton, & son. 1 daughter. ke Scher, Bis- July 25 4 To Mr. and Mrs. James E. Kiley, } Bismarck, a daughter. ; July 27 To Mr. and Mrs. George Smith, Bismarck, a daughter. ‘o Mr. and Mrs. John Gerving,! len Ullin, a son. July 28 To Mr. and Mrs. Joseph James To Mr. and Mrs. Clarence F. Al- son, Mandan, a son. DEATHS chel T. O'Connell, 64, Bis- Mrs. Dora’Jundt, 45, Bismarck. july Richard H. Burke, 72, Gettys- burg, S. D. 4 nie ‘i Buby Page, ian Hbowoods- | president! Coolidge had no sooner announced that he did not want to Wm. Wetzel, 59, Tuttle. run for reelection in 1928 than Frank O, Lowden, former jae uly 6 of Illinois and considered an outstanding candidate for ‘the G. O. P. | Mrs. Alfred Hart, 24, Bismarck. presidential nomination, hurried to-Chicago from his summer home july 7 and went into conference with political leaders. Here he is shown Theodore Eberts, 13, Dickinson. at the telephone getting reports on political prospects. Christian F. Ewald, 68, Hebron. Clement George Kasper, one day, Mandan. July 12 Buget Bagley; 77, Mrs. Fort Clark. Notes On European Travel July 15 By George D. Mann Fred Schuler, 61, Herried, S. D. Helen *Edelia Robidou, 20, Bis- marek. Editor’s Note: This:is the tenth 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. and shares its plentiful reward. with July 18 the aioe family, descendants Peter Kasper Weber, 61, poleon. aoe of the Beloved son-in-law of the fa- mous author. Lockhart was Scott’s faithful secretary and his biography of the author is probably the best... His: body lies beside that of Scott at Dryburgh, a fitting tribute to the great services of a son-in-law, a biographer, and above 8 friend. Abbotsford, on. the banks of the river Tweed, is the fulfillment of. Scott’s dearest desire,.a home on the banks of the river he loved so well. The fine collection of an- tiques would make a visit to this shrine rok via while, but to roam through its~ greats library. f of thousands of volumes, bound in is a constant stream of pilgrims | exquisite’ hand-tooled bindings, is wending their way toward Metrose | a rare treat. Abbey, Dryburgh Abbey and Ab- pextee: 3 botsford. : The trip from Melrose to London The English should indeed be|is made by easy stages. Just be- grateful to their great poet and|fore dipping into the valley of the novelist, Scott, for in him they had|Tweed, we spent one night ‘in {not only a man of fine literary|famous Burnham Woods Shakes- merit, but a source of revenue as|peare mentions in Macbeth. Some. i Well. The government controls the ‘of the old oaks that caused Macbeth July 19 Elizabeth Grygoryk, 29, Wilton. J july 21 Richard Lee Gallahan, 17, Bis- marek. Not even in the Shakespeare country did we witness such crowds as stood about the landmarks made famous by the great novelist, Sir Walter Scott. Whether this indi- cates that Scott is still read, or merely that the tourist companies have made such places so accessible that the traveler takes them with July 22 Mrs. Edmond Falkenstein, 86, Bismarck. july 23 Maria Kehler, 29, Tuttle. July 28 Helen M. Olsen, 33, Burt. i July 31 Ole, J. Toxen, 68, Bismarck. the same fortitude that he tackles an English breakfast, is a matter Se ee ee ee for speculation. At any rate, there New York.—While a cutter taking several deportecs to a liner about to sail for Italy, one Giuseppi Sacco, seeking either escape, a bath or suicide, jumped overboard. Any- way, he was seized by the swift tide nd was nearly drowned when - man fi ly pulled him ashore. 0 lturned on his panting rescuer and was ‘meanders through. others are splitti branches held ai other devi + Swinging down toward. London are prospects for ver: ields that went cha No ‘and ‘Sher- and high qualities, canecatly onthe ins busines od fame, jearly wheat. fretches there’ wil etal be f ‘rly good yields, | es ere will si ai at the/as there was a heavy stand. There {through |wood forest of Robin, Hi the Shakespeare count | Americans used to of road might be annoy ttingham, with age, their 'ern“and eastern by, props and Montana and northwestern North FRIDAY, AUGUST 12, 1927 ” FIRE-FIGHTING SPRES Chicago—Mgny a -traffic cop in Dakota, ‘rust. has not been! Chicago’ the other night ‘Sleared ‘such a serious factor and there still his crossing for irae eee youths tied him e manner. But there a gun and stole in cameo ‘where| "2! no fire. and next. morning the firemen.” dam: by rust South Dakota. In| bound and gagge slow,. proprea. segs necessary by|is a considerable amount of late the winding were it not for|wheat that is dependent upon the the delightful English country it/further development of black rust. One is content to poke along and view at leisure the fine homes, rose covered set like jewels on the softest of green lawns. We found the Riven Avon the most interesting spot. It is quite an experience to take an evening’s row in one of the flat bottom tubs propelled by poles or great oars. Stratford is highly organized to care for the tourists. Hotel ac- eommodations, however, are poor and most tourists see these places with either London or Oxford as their headquarters. ° _ The most enthusiastic of guides is forced to be many places attached to Shakespeare’s career have had only a remote connection. His home, restained and rebuilt, and jquite new looking on the exterior, may or birthplace. the dignified curates about the home aroused have only to suggest that Bacon might have written the favorable, with very few ex plays attributed to Shakespeare. if that does not suffice try/season without sny serious trouble oats. We, a little I e avalanche documents and records these staunch patriots haul ing rushed E tI out upon such occasions is sufficient to convince the most cynical—you|had any setbacks coring the season. jel even look with some degree of sym- pathy upon those who sit for a jwhile in the “chair of inspiration” | turns in the lower rooms of the Shal pearian home. ; ° 4 Th un- A few visits to espe cities certain. It has develo slowly led by)and is very uneven. is sufficient. One gets ! | may not have been his|oats of good quali Those desiring to see|the crop as a aholewi be extreme- itius Donelley.|such as ‘affected kes-| bushels to the acre, Fortunately the weather for a week} has been unfavorable for rust. | Recently, the. temperatures in Canada, at several points, were be- iy freezing, and there was con- siderable concern throughout the aoe From a few o our ions there are réports of yery ight frosts, but probably no dam- has occurred. ee, Threshing returns indicate that the oats crop in the Northwest, is far under original estimates. Some were so badly damaged by red, rust te tee are not worth cut- one er ey ene stage, were either by ig or by hi temperatures which led for a few ire. This resulted in improper filling and very light weight. There are, however, some districts that have yield, bat ly wneven. .. Our ‘reports on barley are very tions. in the home. This crop has come The threshing of rye is not be- ‘armers are cutting other grains. This crop has not Both hoe Kared: Aer Y ld an fully of up expectation, threshing re- effective way: showing from 15 to .35 on is to put e corn crop is extremel; uring. the the mass of curious, some obviously| past week the cold eh i have.re- faked to catch the tourist and ofthis or that at litemey master. One even finds one self harboring the heretical idea that maybe all guide books do not @> mays tell the truth and noth| it the truth. f |;. CROP REPORT | to play upon his regard’ for the work | tared Ne jae j in some dis- art of the crop ig well ad- val ) but there are nearby fields that are backward. In Minnesota and South Dakota some corn, while a little behind normal, will no doubt mature unless there is ex- ceptionally unfavorable weather. - |. Our reports this week indicate that the flax crop is maintaining the air never use any’ of destroyer. Grand Rapids, Michigan {the good condition it has shown throughout the season. There has Wheat and durum is now being been sufficient moisture and the harvested in the four northwestern tates, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and Montana, rd- ing to the weekly crop repo! by the Van Dusen Harringto: pany of Minneapolis. Both crops show clearly that the early pros- pects have been considerably re- duced. Instead of a bumper wheat crop, it will probably be close to an parte black rust, wheat aa Owing to rust, wheat an dium will be uneven ‘both “s to Qy@ality-and-yield. In some dist- Ticts the wheat is shrunken and the yield has been reduced, especially in Minnesota, eastern and southern plant has a healthy growth. Some early flax should be out of danger within time, but there is a large t » flax, outcome hich ‘is’ entirely de- pendent upon the . weather. red rust in flax anparently is not a serious factor, as it has appear- ed only in occasional fields. We have very few -reports of wilt and barring very early frosts the North- west should produce a ‘very. good flax crop. if Cato believed that husbands start- | 7 ed kissing.their wives .and daughters | to determine whethere they had.been 15,000 truck was found i taleteaged and deserted. A watch- man at a new fire,station was found He, said two up at the point of the truck “to play an alley, KILL FLIES) ‘ly, when there is a It doesn't take a swarm af filth- drenched, disease-spreading flies to contaminate food. The simple, convenient and i ‘constant! ie pa tepage 'THE TANGLEFOOT COMPANY ler, Bismarck, a son. demanded, “Where's my hat?” |national monuments to the writer,'such uneasiness, are propped up, i North Dakota, and spots in north-| drinking wine. Sale Starts Sat., Aug. 13th Our Mr. Measuroff, now in full charge of store, wishes to, become acquainted with all the people in Bismarck and vicinity, and he says, “I want to meet them, and give them something to remember me by always.” ‘Eads Sat. Night, Aug. 20th Seay othe If hee ot bought a bargain in the mer: ew. . Ifyou haven a in the mer- chandise you purchase at this sale, we are going to re- fund your money, and the merchandise is yours FREE. feal values, riot air, so we are listing a. $1.50 Value ..... $2.50 Values . $3.00 Values .. $4.00 Values $1.00 Athletic Unions 58 $1.25 Knit Unions .78 Buy For Fall Now. Also Better Grade. Dress Shirts .. $1.68 $1.98 Work Shirts $1.00 Value ............... .78 $1.50 Values .......2....... 88 Blue, Gray and Fancy Ties $1.00 Values .....2.......' 68 $1.25 Values ............. 88 $1.50 Values ............ 98 Wash Ties, $1.00 Value ... .25e Curlee-Adler ite carries our same bond guarantee. At the lowest prices ever heard of aoywite Collars, Soft and Stiff 20c, 35c and 50c values, Lot at 5c_| -and 10c, Pick them out. ' Straw Hats ‘Entire stock, value up to $6.00 Work Pants $2.00 Value .....)....3..$148 $2.95 Value .. $3.50: Value. . $4.00 Value’. ‘$6.50 Value ..-..4.... +. $4.38 2 Latest Styles © : tT a $1.50 Values... ..98 $2.00 Values. .$1-48 Pian si.6s Boys’ Caps at 48e and 68c. 2 Dress Felt Hats he ee ee eg ee + G2G8 ¢.35¢ Walue - vel 4