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SPA CTOTTITIT THURSDAY, “AUGUST 235, cl The Gamble Auto of Bismarck is open for tae Lt can ‘now bu: quality automobile sup- plies. at Tmail order prices and save the transportation. PAGE TWO CONTRACTS | LET FOR WORK | ON RED TRAIL Grading of Road Through! Richardton and West of Mandan Arranged For THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Orchard, Maine, at 11 o'clock today on the first Jap of a flight to Harbor Grace, F., where they expect to start their globe-girdling grind on Saturday. Cosgrave Regime Gains Majority es Irish ry State, 25.—(P)—President ‘Co: ve's va; ernment has gained @ majority in athe ail Eireann by winning the two b; elections held yesterday. The count of the ballots showed that both government candi- gates, Gerald O'Sullivan and Mr. Thomas Hennessey, were elected. | Mandan News ! 1 Petes rod and cre. chitdren| mack. esca: jous injury | when the car Mrs Laltose, Ww =k | ing collided. with a truck Tuesday on the Red Trail near Spiritwood. the Lakose was turned over and badly dam The occupants | were brul ee but nie b injuries, Mrs, Lak and daughters | returned to Bismarck Wednesuay. i Ingstad Garage to Sell Hudson-Essex Appointrient-of the Ingstad garage’! associate dester in” Hudson’ and ‘ssex automobiles in Bismarck and! lodels of both lines afe now on di: play at the garage on Broadway, and it is Mr. Ingstad’s intention to render | first class service to emia e) | ' I Joseph Catholic rectory. Rev Father | Paul officiated, Mr. and Mrs. ‘Five Years in Pen i | For Negro Laborer — Handtmann auended "the bridal Imposed for Forgery cane; bride tana Ree: affendane wore : | trave ling suits of sh ades of tan. ieorge Monroe, 0, was {ty five years’ in the state 'y when he pleaded guilty 1 hotel in Bismare Mr. and Mrs, Murray left for Min- in the second degree be- neupolis and Foley, Minn., Wednesday | Judge H. L. Berry Wednesday. by car. After two weeks the nroe, who worked for a farmer reiugn to make their home in Additional contracts for road im- near Flasher, admitted he forged a dan at the Thompson residence, ent work in various parts of check for $ a hey store, | avenue northwest. were let by the state hig an record, | The bride is a graduate of Mandan mission which closed a three-|ienieney was Tecommenne’ to. the high school and of the nurses’ train-| pardon board by both the judge and the state's Under the law, five year inimum sentehce tor forge: in the second degree. Monroe served abroad three years, "iwas gassed and afterwards under- went treatment at government hos- pital at Fort Prescott, 4 He had v9 previous criminal record, today} Because ssion today. course of the Deaconess hospital. urds were announced today She has studie St. Alexius hos-1 tal in Bismarck, ahd for the past! r has been taking advanced train- ing in the Robinson’ hospital at} Modesta, Calif, | 4 Mr. Murray has been a resident of Mandan several years, and has recently been made™ assistant man-; agéPof the Winston & Newell pany Wholesile housé in Bismarck. miles east and west aren Miller & Capitol Theatre Tonight - Thursday. - buyers and owners, “I have been considering selling a {line of cars for some time ard have | made an extensive investigation of west from i as Burn- Rou weit i, William east from arth ch Lt 3. Thompson, Minot, $15 miles he junction with Villiam —Coman, grading improvement through Fessenden. on H. Noe, Jamestown, This contract. wi ject to the approval of t pany which bonded Pargett Taée, who defaulted Tl ding company for finishing the w Contracts for concrete work, metal and concrete pipe culverts and other this y nrogram although some of the work Brdbably will not be finished befor Text year, it was said at the highway department offices Lutheran Mission Will| Hold Special Program’ Sunday for Deaf Mutes he Zion Lutheran Mission of Bis-| marek will hold gram Sunday, ce for the deaf- mute peopie of this city. Rev. L.| \ Vaderwood will open the] morning at 10: the German lan ionary Zeal of h a sermon coon the Biery Christi The joint service; with the deaf- mute people will be held Sunday eve Ring at 8 o'clock. Rev. Weber will preach the sermon tn the English Fapeuage, while Rey. W. Ferber of Duluth will interpret it in the sign language. = atey, Ferber, who has charge of the ionary programs for deaf-mutes in North Dakota, conducts services int Devils Lake, Grafton, Fargo, Grand Forks, and Bismarck, Continued Warmth > Predicted for City 2 3he clouds are due to scurry Across the bea zt need not cause This warm spell isn’t don As the mercury continued its gteady climb upward Wednesday, the maximum temperatures for North Da. kota points climbed until they more early approximated normaley. Hettinger, with 82, had the highest maximum and Minot, with 66, the lowest. Bismarck had a maximum of 71. = Whe lowest minimum was held by Amenia and Dunn Center, with 48 each. Bismarck had 55. The high- est minimum was reported at Willis- | ton, 60, =Zhe prediction for tonight and Fri- is: “Partly cloudy; not much change in p Remipeent 1 Alleged Sabin Bank ** Robbers Arraigned Moorhead, Minn., Aug. 25.—(2) Clyde Short and Joseph Chett Town- e¥ were arraigned in Moorhead po. ce court today on charges of rob- bigg the Sabin State Bank of Sabin, Clay county, of $1,922 on July 1 he two won demanded preliminaty | hearings which were set for next| ‘Thursday. They were then remanded to the county jail to await their hear- hearing of Mrs. Willie Mae Williams, previously arraigned on a Similar charge, was set for the same day. Mrs. Williams also faces a ge of complicity in the robbery. the two men have refused to ad- ae any connection with the crime ugh Short has said that he was in this section of the country recently, iff Archie Whaley said. Bismarck Youth Is Gaining Fame = Bert Dunn, Jr., Bismarck youth, is ining fame as a swimmer and as a isherman in Minnes em from a Brainerd newspa- per tells how Dunn swam three miles on. Gull lake in two hours and 15 minutes. . Since the lake was especial- fi rough that day, his feat was con- fdcred: outstanding. - far as is ther according to the Brainerd spaper, he is.the only individual has accomplished this feat on Gun lake. iso. th eG sis was also.the hero in a Se i cetaine to the paper. While 3 on the at a pollens ee 3 one fis there He re ached down alongside ‘be boas pd ca ‘the si ety the fish under- woe shore and proved to: be a was alive when pike weighing eight pounds. ————_— vending June existed in 1917. School Term Longer in Morton Co. Now By lengthening the average term in Mortow county. schools. from ‘158 days to 163 days, students attended school 2 days more in the year 1927, than they did in a similar period in 1917, it is! shown by the annual report of H. K ensen, county superintendent of | schools. Attendance figures show a gain of per cent, with the students having erage attendance of 92 per cent Iments in common schools jumped from students in High school ime have nearly * tripled. stud 353 such students in. 1927, There are now 68 standardized schools as compared to the six that The number of high school graduates has more than quadrupled in the ten-year _period,| with 21 students raduating from high schools in 1917 and with 93 fin- | ishing this work in 1927. Certificates for perfect attendance were granted 2 ing the last year, a marked increase from 1917, high school Personal and | Social News of | Mandan Vicinity || eS Corine Funden and... | John J. Murray Are | Married at Mandan’ The’ wedding of Miss Corine Fun-| den, daughter of Mrs. Clara Funden| of Mandan, and John J. Murray took place Wednesday morning in the St.’ 2 boys and girls dur- | Lloy VISIT FORMER RESIDENTS Mrs. John Broshard and Miss Mary Broshard returngd Tugsday from a two weeks’ trip Sty Western. cities. At Billings, Monts they the guests of Mr. former residents of Mandan. TAKE VACATION TRIP Mr, and Mrs. I. S, Iverson of Man- dan ‘and Ben leg¢son of ‘Bangon, Minn,, have returned’ from a vaeafion trip to Yellowstone Park and ‘the Black Hills. RETURN : Milton were IP y nt state's from a © points in eastern he western n- so visited friends at TO LOS ANGELES rk, who has. spent the the guest of his » left Wed- Los Angeles, Caryle past few w mother, Mrs. An nesday ‘for his home: Calif, DRIVE TO,FARGO G, H. Spielman and son, left by car Wednesday for where they will visit friends few days. AT JUDSON Miss Enid Burdick of this city is spending a week in Judson as. the guest of Mrs. Henry Kuether, VISITS HERE Miss Dorothy Arthur of Devils Take is the house guest of Miss Madeline Romer of this city. ON BUSINESS H. A. Schmitt of ¢ company left Tuesday Mont., on a busi for Lewiston, 8s trip. VISITS RELATIVES in’ tives. ismarck as the guest of rela- WILL STEEL CORPORATION ADOPT NEW ‘GO-GETTING’ POLICY NOW?, Conservatism of Judge Elbert H. Gary’s Regime May End If du Ponts Get Control— Concern Now Displays Lack cf Aggressiveness (Editor's Note: is the second of a series of articles discussing the reported formation of a $4,000,000,000 corporation out of U. S. Steel, General Mo- tors and the du Pont interests.) BY JOHN W. HILL Financial Editor, Iron’ Trade Review The United § n, purchase of Tl s Steel Corpor: a block of who: sh It has done a gross business of approximately $25,000,000,000 during the 26 years of its corporate life. This sum is considerably larger than the public debt of the United States. | It is more than the combined values of the railroads of the count: tentatively fixed bv the Interstate Commerce Commission. During the same period the cor- poration has disbursed in dividends to its stockholders about $: og 000 and has paid out in wages to i employes apprbcantaly $0,600,001 000. Tremendous Growth H When first formed 26 years ago the corporation had fifty subsidiaries and subsidiary organizations, fifteen | of them main subsidiarie: | But today there are 130 subsidiary and sub-subsidiary companies, 27 of them being main operating com- s surplus of $i and immense working capital of $438,477,000, the wealth and power of the company stands unmatched in strength and the conservatism of its management, the corporation has played an important part in the great drama of American industry ever since its inception. By avoiding extremes and keeping its head in good times and in bad the corporation came, under the regime of the late chairman, H. Gary, to be ahi as a stabil- izer of American industry. Its poli- cies have been marked by exceptional caution. Welcome New Policy Curiously enough, in this go-get- age, the corporation has dis- ack of ngereaslvene In fact, it is th lack of aggres- i the cornerstone of the poration’s policy, which leads many olders to ome the idea of the infusion of some of the vi du Pont blood into the s of the great steel giant. When the corporation was formed ears ago, Elbert H. Gary, a Chicago corporation lawyer of high tainment, was board of directors. Until his death on Aug. 15, this same man remained at the helm. In fact it almost might be said that he sat on the throne as a benevolent! but absolute monarch, and_ wielded i the most powerful industrial scepter | the world has ever known, It_was Judge Gary who formulated ,| or final moves of the corporation. It was his! voice alone which interpreted the policies or explained the acts of the world’s biggest enterprise. An Industrial Czar No single man of his time er been the sole spokesman for AUDIT and Mrg, Joe Zuber, , Red Trail Oil’ Miss Ora Burdick spent Tuesday % lected to head the; \ | j Admiral Richard He Jackson, mander-in-ehief of the United States men-o'-war the Pacifie waters for the San‘ Francisco-Honolulu com- racérs. st enterprises as the more 000,000,000 worth of proper- enrolled under the banner of the | United States Steel Corporation. will ever do so again. ssor is unlikely to attempt it, but will find it expedient to dele- gate more authority. During his lifetime the value of the shares of the vanced from ste! to a high point of 176 in 1926. sa tribute to thi with ek he had brought organization through its maturity, | t even his death did not cause j break in the value of the shares. During the early part of this cen- ‘tury big business was under bitter at- tack from the trust-busters. With masterful hand, Jutige’*Gary | piloted the industrial ship under,his .com- mand triumphantly throug «these jdangers. He emerged from the storm {of political and governmental hos- tility with the seal of approval upon the acts and conduct of the corpora- tion affixed by the Supereme Court of the United States. Judge Gary won out by clinging to’n few basic guiding principles. He early stood for a policy of franknes: i ith the public against many of his; sociates who regarded such ideas) \anrainogsly: cadical | Ha. pracy ieee \fair dealing his employes and) ‘competitors. Eventually it -beeame clene that the Steel Corporation was commercial octopus, despite its | great size, Task Different Now Judge Gary’s successors will confronted with a different task thai the one he carried, to successful con clusit poration. through its perilous+ early ane gave a stability to the en- twol industry which previously ,had been in a state of destructive { competit With this momentous task accomplished, those who take up Judge Gary’s work will find it pos- sible to devote more intensive atten- | tion to the pressing present day prob- lem These include technical re- search, more economical. production | land distribution, and more aggres-; sive marketing. The passing of Judge Gary comes at a time when a new era,is dawning n the steel industry. It is because lof the amazing success -in_all the broader fields of modern efficiency in big business of the du, Ronts that their active entrance into the affairs of the Steel Corporation) would be regarded favorably throughout the | "steel industry. le and! MONEY TO LOAN Improved City Property Low Interest Rate and Repayment Privilege Bismarck and Mandap On 1 \ cLINIC OF DR. MacLACHLAN Harvard University Cures Dinenxen . by Methods Without Met Drugs or Surgery Glassen Fitted, has! ORIUM SATURDAY NIGHT, AUGUST 27 Curtain - 8:30 SEATS NOW AT HARRIS & WOODMANSEE’S 500,000 ; | be} He steered the great -cor-| | | | | | | the value offered. by many motor car} manufacturers,” fleet of 42. ‘av. hunting I have come to, the conclusion that missing the value offered by Hudson-Fssex would best meet the public demand.” soclapeit with Mr. Ingsta another start for the Azores in his transat- lantic flight this evening. His heay- corporation ad.’ ils’ londed flying boat, the Whale, re- low point of 8 around fused for the second successiv day to leave the water. p the great, Try Our Modern ‘High Pres- sure Greasing Service For All! Cars. — Prices Short Stop Station. Here is Mme. Alla’ Nazimova, the stage star, as she returned to New York aboard the Ile de France from theatrical engagements abroad. The photographer has “caught” one of imav Mr. Ingstad said to- “After looking them all over ae Six Motors, Inc., also dealers the Hudson-Essex: line, will be as- COURTNEY. FAILS AGAI Southampton, Bungland,” Au: ptain Frank L. Courtney made unsuccessful attempt ' (#)—Tentative low hids were announced today by M. Babcock, commissioner of high- on several trunk highway pro; ects, bids on which were opened Aug. | includes qraveling of . between Randall and; 5, miles, J. H. Boltz, Far- D,, Oe die 797, Bie NL FLYERS START OUT Cprtis Feld, N. ¥., Aug. 25.—() | --Edward F.’ Schlee and William! Brock, who hope to make a record fight ‘around the world. left for Old Ea Reasonable.| Announcement The Bropdway Fruit Store is now siniige new man- agement with a complete line of fresh fruits, vege- tables, groceries, soft drinks, ice cream, candies, tobac- cos, magazines ‘aha newspapers. For Friday and Saturday we will have the following ‘specials: « Grapes, Seedless, two pounds Oranges, per dozen ......... Cream, per quart ........ Pabst Malt Syrup, per can ...: Chocolate Covered Cherries, per di 68¢e .Give us a trial. You will be pleased with our service and your patronage will be appreciated. rane «+ IT IS GUARANTEED! Sonne C: Fusvare PETER B.KYNES Fla V ILLIAM BOYD “AnD ELINOR FAIR — Aoarreo sy WILL M. RITCHEY _A’ Vivid Vital Drama from Peter B, Kyne’s Famous Novel. Comedy: “He Couldn’t Help It” OWN in par ee Mis- godt I use it just as 1 would any Bring the juice to-a_ boil: lc souri.for many years I-made other sugar. putting in the sugar.: aay Pa sodianes id ip the conan Great. Thaye a few simple tules for ielly « After the sugar is dissolved, ma ‘Western contest, I presented the ™aking: * the,juice again through cheesecloth " matter. to my organization, Circle. Make small batches aiKime since 0 get out any specks thar may 1, Women’s saa no that i * one of the secrets of getting still remain. tear, firm, quivering jelly suchas. Be very careful not ‘to had the any housewife likes to serve. in we de- cided to-enter.. ‘Thad never before used beet #1 canelid ig eg sakien wie not er ee - q red, we j ae ve ‘this nstance we would use Great a a Now that I have seen the sin elimi Fea Observe extreme cleanliriess i in every operation. ‘Strain. the friie. th ane pag bang retin proved fennet to eet slearnnat;, ‘ ae vd juice too long.’ ‘By all.means we mothers should teach the art of jelly making to our daughters, so. that. this. most: deli- © ‘cious of home-made sweet. foods . will continue to. be served: regularly” on Américan tables. ‘select good fruit.” through. cotton The. Great Westen Seg Comey Sugar. Building honboee be ee making, pa ‘preserving. ’