The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 9, 1927, Page 4

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‘PAGE FOUR ¢ Man Is Killed in Automobile Crash Near Donnybrook Minot, Sept. 9.-#)—0, Smith ot Some Swanky Paris Models Ashton, S. D., was instantly killed! Rebel Against Uniform- this forenoon four miles northwest ity, Says Germaine ——_- cf Donnybrook, when an automobile! in which he overturned in} <@xditch while g to pass an-| “ther machine p Four other men in Biatvits, Peande: the automobile when it overturned ear Cousin: seagefed with minor injuries ‘We are all packed to return to —— | Paris, If it were not that, Jacques “a8 ’ vB. °, |w arrive in Paris just about the Chicago’s Chinatown | tine 1 do, 1 should put up a great “ wail about leaving this gay, beauti- Moves From Old Home 1: sv. Z | As it is, I am only acting the mar- Chicago, Sept. 9. 4%—Chicago’s tT while in secret my soul is in re- chinatown is moving joicing. injured did’ I appear when Father decided not to go un to Vor fifteen years, it has been es eee Sig decond Street; the Lido, that his hard heart melted hear Archer Avenue, but. in a few and he told me to go out and buy the the Chinese will be at home coat 1 wanted so badiy. Which I on South Wentworth avenue to, did. And more! third str | Diagonal Opening Hides Pocket t tL of Twenty-second street Widem You know last week I told neces ed the move i was in revolt against uniformity The On Leon Tong, an association ¢.othes. Just when my feelings were of. m. ants, began the trek by wrought up to the highest. I passed “putting «a new headquarters south one of the smart little shops and of Twenty-second street on the west through the open door I saw a manne- side of Wentworth avenue jquin in coat and hat that expressed The building, four-story struce’ its reaction in its very being. ture, will cost $500,000, and will bi Before | knew it, I was inside the opened in October with elaborate! shop, and inside the coat. 1 knew! ceremonies ‘ 1T had to have it. I told Father} This is the second move for the frankly how I felt about. it. Chinese © pf was ve unsympathetic aes 7 lin going back into an 1 {and trying to figure ou how many London Glass House | oe hist | So, when he decided to return to & Has 25-acre Roof: paris ‘he was only too glad to con 9--/#)—Luckily no you can see how very different and house, the; original it is. Not one thing about | coats I own {cede the coat. From the photograph So the old saw about | it is ordinary! The material is a sofs throwing of stones does not hold.! lovely gray kasha-—just the color I Crystal , one of the said I would have none of, but never mind-—it has the smart diagonal op- | ening and a silly pocket just where Is in the world, its roof with res ARE NEW COATS IN . Two hundred feet above} no pocket before ever thought of be- the ground, it contains thousands! ing. It is braided in gray braid and %f panes. When the Palace was re-| has a turn-over collar of the most opened $400,000 was spent exciting red velvet. The hat, which in a tionig the roof. Since men have all but lived on roof; keeping it in condition.' “netting is stretched { most of it. | During the war the Crystal Palace was a favorite target for raiding! German airplanes. All the glaziers were at work on the roof when one such raid was announced. One of, the glaziers slid down the railing of! a circular staircase so fast that he really belonged with it xo it would have been sinful to separate the two, 1s also of gray, fuced back with the same red, I rather think when ques sees me in that he won't be orry he returned to his native land. Weird Stripes and Plaids In the same shop I fell for another hat, which will also be very nice with the coat if 1 decide that I want a change. It is one of the new abso lutely plain turbans, in gray felt, thi ; has square flaps over the ears apparently took an idea or si the aviator’s helmet. The gray is very soft and dovelike, in tone, so it is very easy to feel like a demure in it. To live up to the be a shade more difficult. same shop I saw some of }the very extreme new fur coats and +1 had one photographed for you so that you could see the trend in furs. U. S. Crop Forecast! id very close and id pattern, then made exactly like a sport coi I saw oth- Washington, Sept. 9.—(#)—This| ers with stripes and sorts of year’s corn crop was forecast at! 4£}3.561,000 bushels and the spring = whgat rep at 308,125,000 bushels to- e under burned out the seat of his trousers and was so dizzy when he reached the bottom that he fell to the ground| unable to move. 5 The building was designed by Sir Joseph Paxton and was constructed originally in 1854 largely from ma- terials of the hall set up in Hyde Park for the exhibition of 1851. the possible exception of the zebra, ever thought of before. I saw many new felt hats vairted so that they looked exactly like leopard skin or snakeski: very soft felt. The effect ig decided- ly_new and chic. It seems to me highly probable that the “culotte,” polite word for panta- Joon, insjata upon being taken more} seriously. I_have seen ever so many evening gowns here, of diaphanous fabrics, beaded or embroidered with Spring wheat’s condition a month] floating panels that revealed bloom- ogo was 86.4 per cent of normal, in-| ers of the same material, ‘similarly dicating a crop of 298,378,000 bushels.! trimmed. With such designers en| weird effects that no animal, with by t department of agricul- ture, «-=The condition of corn on September 1 was 69.7 per cent of a normal and of spring wheat 82.7 per cent. A month ago the condition of corn was 71.2 per cent, indicating a crop! =gf>2,385,226,000 bushels, and on Sep- fémber 1 last year it was 73.08 per cent while production was 2,646,853,- 000 bushels. On September 1 last year. it wae 58.4, Worth, Lanvin, Philippe and Gaston “sper sent and production was 205,376,-| and others showing such costumes, 000 bushels. their vogue is almost assured. The total wheat crop, including the i ' Hee 552,767,000’ bushels of winter whent| | Circular Hemlines Are Hest of this’ year’s erop, is placed at 860,-| Ruffled and circular hemliues seem 892,000 bushels compared with 832, 89,000 bushels last year The condition on September 1 other important crops was: 7 per cent of a normal. what we had any right to expect. of' Some of the smartest satins for aft-; 0.3, ernoon have ruffled skirts, usually {these ruffles taking a diagonal course uck wheat 83.1; flaxseed 84.6; rice or being added so that they give a $4.5; grain sorghums 82.5; sugar beet! slanting . rather than a horizontal 87.2; white potatoes 77.8; sweet pota-/line for the eye to travel, | 8 80.0; tobacco 78.5; peanuts 78.6. There is nothing like the diagonal; vd <e ERS :Hne to convey the idea of slender- oe - 0 | ness. Just as there is nothing like geometrical cuts and intricate seam- ings to give the {iden of smartness. y what you will, women want to jook slender. And the most success- ful couturiers in Puris are the ones who realize this. If you can take off five pounds with a certain line and add ten with another, why bother to diet? Let your costumer work it all out for you. We are leaving tonight, so my next letter be from Paris. They tell | me the styles are worth going back for. So expect reams. From your devoted cousin, Germaine. GUNMAN 18 KILLED St. Louis, Sept. 9.—(?)—Gang war- fare broke out again here today with Palazzolo, ELTINGE THEATRE Milton Sills will be seen at the a e today and Saturday in thea” with the setting,largely the | diamond mines of Brazil along the up§r-Amazon river. It is the story | of a French army officer, Etienne Hilaire, who is wrongfully accused at@séourt martialed. Driven out of the army in disgrace he goes to Brazil ind. is entrapped by a designing ; * Sena, Disillusioned —he buries himself in the jungles and becomes fazaman of a diamond mine. flton Sills as Hilaire is force- ful and convincing and carries the - rs him in his experi- ences. Natalie Kingston is a de-| the killing of Alphonse lightful heroine. A terrific scene notorious ‘Italian gunman, and the is the “mud-rush” where tons of| wounding of a 14-year-old boy by- liquid ooze flow into a mine, trap-| stander who chanced to be in range ping Hilaire and the girl. He suc- ceeds in picking a hole through the roof of the tunnel and they escape. The atmosphere of the jungle, the penal settlement and the mines, is mrost carefully worked out. CAPITOL THEATRE A whole town, and scores of peo- ple from the ranches round-about, ! | aided in the making of “Men of, i Daring,” Western Special production coming to the Capitol The: id Friday and Saturda: i cast, The town in question is Deadwood, South Dakota. The picture was filmed during Jwood’s annual “Days of '76" celebration. For months Deadwood | BLIND, EDITS BOOK Los Angeles.—One of the ‘several existing journals for the blind is “The Braille Mirror,” published at Atkinson was stricken blind when 35, and at once turned to the prob- of journal b ented spe stereotyping ma- chinery and presses for Br: The journal even carries ment: Hello, Bil ! months after 6 o'clock. Come » and een prepari for hea rs. Ter ovat and bad’ made ituelt over |@neme It your Reasquar 462 10bk it did fifty years ago. male portion of the town even tt so far as to allow beard hair to grow, so that the men mignt as-the men of the period did. id _heirlooms and relics night, Sept. 10.—Jenkins’ or- ‘! chestra. were MONEY, TO LOAN coaches, Ridge Agency contributed several hi Indians to the celebration and cav- came from Fort Meade. Into the midst of all this went the Uni. and with the co-opera: rood, filmed the prin- intl ie great picture id We leads a cast of Ena Greg: P. C. REMINGTON 103%, -4th St. Phone 220- ‘scenes of the ol Hoxie Dance at Moran’s Saturday made of |' to me to have developed far beyond] 4¢, CELSO PDP PPPS LAM0 f bullets fired from an automobile | @ Los Angeles by J, Robert Atkinson. | § sm for the blind. He] is open for you every evening : REVOLT? | UL 8. No. 2—G more, mostly gravel, fair. | to Kugby, gravel, good. Gr: to Berthold, mostly gravel, | Berthold to Montana State to Arvilla, ; gravel, good. Jamestown to Crystal | Springs, partly gravel, good. construction at Crystal Springs. Crystal Springs to Steele, earth, good. Steele to Driscoll, good. Dris-{ coll to Sterling, fair. MeKenzie to Bismarck, partiy gravel, good. De- tour at rek, Bismarck to Man- dan, paved. Mandan to New Salem,! earth, fair, New Salem to Hebron,| ‘ good. Hebron to Dickinson, . xood. Dickinson to Belfield, fair, Construction west of Dick Belfield to Medora, earth, Medora to Sentinel Butte, . rough> Sentinel Butte — to} earth, good. Detour 4 miles; of Valley City. Detour at Buf- 2.—Lemmon to Bucy: Us, | Bucyrus to Marmarth, South Dakota Line to | . earth, good, Fargo to . mostly gravel, good. ‘orks to Pembina, earth fai: jon from Grand d Forks ‘to Minto under from Grand | won No. 83—South Dakota rth, rough. Hull to geod. Linton to Moffit, partly ood. Moffit to Sterling, @ gray helmet terdan! South Dakota Line to gravel, good. Lakota to th, good. shley to Steele, le to Hurdsfield, , fair, Hurdsfield to , good. Rugby to Dun- |. good. 4-Ellendsle to James- earth, good. Jamestown to gravel, good. Construc- = north of New Rockford. 5—Hamilton fo Cavalier Line, earth, good. Cavalier ine to Rock Lake, earth, Rock Lake to Bottineau, geod. Bottineau to Mohall, ¥ grsvel, good. Mohail to Bow- fai Bowbells to Montana 3— . partly ¢ , good. Detar tetween Tolley and Bowbells. = 8 . 6—Bismarck to Wilton, ton to Washburn, mostly good. Washburn to Max, earth. fair. Three-mile detour north Max, Max to Minot, gravel, good. Minot to Canadian Line, earth, good. + from Max to County Line. H. No. ‘Cummings to Griggs y Line, earth, good. Griggs y Line to Denhoff, gravel, good. Gravel construction to Mc- y. MeClusky to Underwood, esrth. good. A Wimble-; S$. H. No. 9—Havana to grsve!, good. Wimbledon to Mel- . earth, good. Melville to New ‘Radio Tubes, 98c. Every 201A Concert Master Tube is thor- ; oughly tested and fully guaranteed. Gamble Au- .,.to Supply .Co., 220 Main | Ave., Bismarck, N. D. Shaved fur. d\ed in plaids. Behold the latest sport coat! “silly” pocket, velvet touch. Of course, it’s unique, —| most of them in Arkansas. The fin-} est domestic diamond was found ‘in 1924 and weighed 40.2: More than 10,000 diamonds en found in the United States, 6% 7 Hosiery Satistactio An easily satisfied desire if one wears Phoenix Hosiery, the revealer of good taste and individuality. Service, Semi-chiffon and Chiffon weights, knit on fine gauge machines, have a special tiptoe protection and are shown in all the popular shades for the new autumn season to the welts with double roinfaeed hockey 2 sil $1 50, $195 SOLD EXCLUSIVELY AT - Webb Brothers - “Merchandise of Merit Only”. NORTH DAKOTA ROAD BULLETIN Issued Weekly By The North Dakota Department of State Highways nd Forks to Lari-! Rockford, gravel, good. Larimore | ford to Junction No. 3, earth, fair. ite Junction No. 3: to jod.! good. Marvey to Minot, earth, fair. ne,| Minot to Kenmare, gravel, good. De- carth, ‘yood, Construction Larimore) tour Ki U. S$, No, 10--Fargo to Jamestown, | tour Si Under ; 890 | good. i | . H. No, 36—Pingree to Wilton,} earth, fair. a. Ashley to Fairmount, earth, | Town Finds Asbestos, | Uses It in Chimneys : re built of cement and asbestos, be- cause the asbesto: So extensive is local use of as-j bestos that geolo Ww. posit: {tile variety tain ranges. and | ing states, deposits are generally one small The United consumer of asbestos the world, but cent of the mineral—largely from Canadian mines just over the Ver-) mont lin JOV Chi seeing the record breakin, ‘sion of bituminous coal Ilinois ended with a resumption of work next Monday were dashed today when the joint committee of 30 oper- tors and 30 miners’ representatives adjourned over the week-end. { ‘Survive Mexican New Rock- Harvey, gravel, nmare ,to Bowbeils. . Bow- ir, to Port: arth, good. De- lawyer to Loy H, No. 11—Hull to Ashley, earth, neys of Casper homes Sept. 9.—4)}—Two i | mines are near) ial is cheap. it has created a new state C. F. Dietz, assistant state } gist, points out. | ‘oming has several asbestos de-; chiefly of the valuable chryso- | in half a dozen mou In other large produ Diets | commercial | confined to| States is the largest, products in! it imports 99.5 per INT bath riba a Athan s 6 <i cago, Sept. 9.-(#—Hopes of | Here are four survivors of the attack by Mexican bandit: mining ie load of American. teachers near Acaponeta, in which Miss" Florence Anderson, 27, was killed. At the top (left to right) are Corene Em- ree, Mary Benson and Louise Rider. Bclow Mrs. Charles Jarrett is shown inting to the hol bullet pi killing Miss Anderson in her hetth. ise Rider wae in the berthwith Miss: Anderson when the attack occurred. train- MURDER CASE VAN DINE © cazits scomuass sous 7.) PHILO VANCE. ; PISTOL. SHOT at: midnight, and. the next. New York. was electrified at the murder 6: wealthy Wall Street broker, Alvin Benson. Killed as he sat ina chair reading a book. No clews save a woman’s handbag and a pair of gloves. The front door locked and the windows barred—no murder- er could have got-in the house unless someone had let : Not in years had the New York police been con- fyonted with such an inexplicable crime... Coincidences and circumstances pointed first to one’ suspect and then another—Muriel St. Clair, Captain: Leacock, Leander Eayig, os Platz, the housekeeper—and had it not been’ or Philo Vance an innocent person very lik have gonetothe chair. dh st ely “ "A masterful detective-mystery tale, introducing character unique among the famous sleuths of fietion— Philo Vance. ‘ i ee os A story that will grip you from tiie very beginning ° - and set you to the pleasurable task ey Beer to pick the murderer yourself, ; Be “It starts, Wednesday, Sept. 14, ¢ The. Bismarek iss Rider was in the berth with \

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