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GE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE NIQUE GROUP'S SST BIRTHDAY i, DRAWING NEAR r tn hurch Unity Club, Nonsectar- G' ; ian, to Celebrate Attain- ment of Majority | —The Chi- Sund: Evening club, out- rowth of successful movement wr church unity sponsored by bust- eds, will enter | y with the opening | y-first season Octod I religious beli i club has rs leading elt Protestant : rabbis and ( Chicago, Sept. —go & wh wt © 2ss men of all In By: denomin- oman 3, th: atholic pr Each Sunday eve- Wing the club's musical serviee an t pl Peaker attract overflow congreza- ,ions to Or tra hall, its meeting y lace on Mic Boulevard. by Leading Business Men Take Part t 44, Clifford W. Barnes, the president t py .nd founder, the vision of i, hurch unity twenty years ago when }: pa ‘¢ succeeded in interesting thirty of LP" chicago’s leading business _men, mong them John G. Shedd, David St %, Forgan, and George M. Reynolds, gt, n the nonsectarian enterprise which Pw ‘as to bear the name o the Sunday © no Zvening club, This summer Mr. yea 3atnes was a delegate to the World atin onference on Faith and Order at qd" sausanne, Switz-land, the first m {reat official step on the part of the ytca ‘hurches of.’he world toward unity. yam Prominent men of Chicago have vy aid they gave their tire to the Ig, lub’s work because it was .irct of 1s.) ull_an outstanding influence against ‘r af ‘eligious intolerance; because it was * w in antidote to the unfavorable opin- ev ion of Chicago as headquarters of m iniquity; because it provided a haven th for the stranger and traveler spend- se ing Sunday in Chicago, and because re it Was a popular service attended by honchurch goers. “We hope tht every stranger who tg comes to Chicago and actends our ‘qj meetings, and the habitual non- church goer who drifts in to our service occasional’ y, will become in- 0 terested in religious matters and be tj moved to join a church of his own # P in the community or city where he i t t c « t lives,” said Mr. Barnes, th presi- dent. “The club is not an end in itself, but an cducational institution. We invite clergymen and laynen of all denominations and creeds, and our audience is composed of people of every belief. Through’ the radio we have an additional audience of thou- sands of hearers in all parts of the country. Many have written us that they have had their interest awak- ened in sviritual matters by listen- ing td the addresses given at th: club.” Speakers already li. i or the present season incluce: Prof. J. Y. Simpson, successor to Henry Drum- mond of New College, Edinburg; Henry Van Dyke, Harry Emerson Fosdick, Wickham Steed, former editor of the London Times, Bishop Charles P. Axdersoi and “Ralph} Connor.” SD ROMA FRI OA LI i] Serna aged ! Services Are Held ' For Ole Anderson 1 ‘ q iderson, 83, died Saturday at his home zt 407 Fourth street following a long illness, } Mr. Anderson was bon: in Den- | ' mark January 6, 1845. He came to | this country while very young, and + served in the United States regular ‘ army for three years, being; sta- tioned in the south. He als the government as mail ca several years. He leaves his wife, dren: Mrs. Anna Tin.me: William and John Anderson of R gan; Edward Ander.on of Kotenar, Wyo.; Mrs, Jessie Skinne: of Noon- an, Idaho; Mrs. Wm. Laveur of Saves er Consolidated 504 Broadway z !-y8a 0} Sutpaosoe ‘awak Aaaa 193 -um Aq Avae paysem s1 000'000'00c$ Jo anjea peuazod wt yyIM puey and Christmas. Heat by 2 sew principle— radiant rays that send heat ly into the — smokel. oderl clean! ot ae bane cata eee Fresno, Calif.; Thompson Falls, Mon Carles Anderson of Minneapolis; Mrs. George Hugelman, Mrs. A. P. Aune, Mrs, Myrtle Peterson, and Misses Gladys and Jeanette Ander- son of Bismar.':. Funeral services were eld this afternoon from Webb Broti: s’ fun- eral parlors, with Rev. G. W. Ste- wart of Mandan officiating. Inter- ment was made in Fairview ceme- tery. Iowa College Wins in Cattle Judging Waterloo, Iowa, Sept. 27.—()— Iowa state college won first place in the collegiate cattle judging con- test at the dairy cattle congress yes- terday, with a total of 1,652 points. Other schools placed as follows: Kansas, Wisconsin, Missouri, Minne- sota, Nebraska, South Dakota, Pur- due, and Illinois. Clarence H. Thompson of Iowa State college was first in the individ- ual contest with 582 points. Mor- rill, Minnesota, was ninth. Franklin county won the inter- state contest from Minnesota's champion team by a score of 1,436 to 1,397, In the interstate contest, the three high scores were: Ralph Thompson, Hampton, 493; John Flynn, Minnesota, 490; Robert Mal- lory, Hampton, 489. Fargo Giant Is in Ag College Lineup Fargo, N. D., Sept. 27.—(AP)— Wanted—one huge pair of football jpants. Not an ordinary big pair, but a size to fit a behemoth line candidate. This is the sign Leonara Saal- wachter, freshman football coach at the North Dakota agricultural col- lege, has tackled on the armory door, The cause for this sudden demand of extra moleskin is the enrollment. of Walter Shamp, captain and star tackle of the Fargo high school football team of last fall. Shimp, who is 19 years old, tips the beam at 252 pounds, perfectly dry and with no bricks in either hand. He stands well over six feet and is classed as one of the finest looking frosh candidates enlisting under the Bison colors. When Shamp reported for freshman prac- tice Monday, saalwaechter took the biggest pair of pants in the supply room, removed all the pads and tucked Shamp in for his initial trot around the field. Tailors will be called in today to measure the giant youth for a new costume, Baron von Maltzan’s Funeral Held Today Vollrathsruhe, Mecklenburgh, Ger- many, Sept. 27.—(#)—The funeral of Baron Ago von Maltzan, German ambassador to the United States who was killed in an airplane acci- dent last week, was held here today. Wreaths from President Coolidge and Secretary of State Kellogg were placed upon the late ambassador’s grave by Jacob Gould Schurman, the American ambassador to Germany. “838130088 jo sayew OCCIDENT ' PHOTOGRAPHS BRAIN SOUNDS Milan Professor Claims Have Proved Contention That Brain Emits Waves to Paris, Sept. 27.—(AP)—Professor Fernando Cazzamali, of the Univer- sity of Milan, who two years ago asserted that the human brain emits waves, now claims to have secured photographic records of these eman- ations. A paper describing his experi- ments was read before the interna- tional congress for psychic research, which opened here last evening. He wrote that, in order to make his studies more complete in regard to the psycho-sensorial phenomena of the brain, he had constructed an apparatus containing a sensitized plate. Plates Were Marked Subjects in a state of hypnosis were placed one after the other, in a room with this apparatus, and later it was found that the sensitized lates were marked with lines and lotches. Their markings, the professor con- tended, corresponded to the thoughts of the subjects, being more or less straight as the subject was more or less of nervous temperament. The phenomena, he added, were not found in persons of unsound mind. Professor Cazzamali, who is head of the department of neurology and psychiatry in the University of Mi- lan, asserted in a report published in August, 1925, that the huma brain emitted sounds which were to be heard distinctly by means of a radio receiver. Like Wireless Signals Using highly excitable persons as subjects, he placed them in a hyp- notic state and, at the extremely low wave length of from 4 to 10 meters, claimed to have _ heard sounds which he was satisfied came from the brain. The sounds were similar to wireless signals, he said, but were often accentuated until they resembled whistling or the tones of a muted violin. PAINSTAKING BURGLAR Indianapolis, Ind. — Msr. Susan Denniston wanted to make sure that her savings were hidden where no one could find them. So she put the| money in a thermos bottle and hid! Always Stiff and Achy? Teo Often This Warns of Sluggish | Kidney Action. AME? Stiff? Achy? Sure your kidneys are working right? Sluggish kidneys allow waste poisons to remain in the blood and are apt to make one languid, tired and achy, with often dull headaches, dizziness and nagging backache. That the kidneys are not acting right is often shown by scanty or burning secretions. If you have reason to believe your kidneys are acting sluggishly, use Doan’s Pills. Doan’s stimulate the kidneys and thus assist in eliminating waste im- purities. Users everywhere en- dorse Doan’s. Ask your | neighbor! | DOAN’S "for | Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys Foster-MilburaCo.,Mfg.Chem.,Buffalo,N.Y. the bottle in a folding bed. But a burglar entered her home and pried open the bed. He smashed the bot- tle and escaped with the money, $80. Political Groups Will Meet in Fargo Fargo, N. D., Sept. 27.— (AP) — The general “real” Republican state committee, the executive committee of the Democratic party, and the general committee of the Independ- ent Voters’ association, will meet in Fargo tomorrow. Calls for these oleae were issued several days ago. Plans for the 1928 political campaign will be discussed. Playing on Streets Will Be Prohibited Children playing football and oth- er games on the streets endangering their own liable to be the cause of auto acci- dents, thereby putting other lives in jeopardy, according to opinions ex- pressed by members of the city com- mission at their regular meeting Monday night and the city auditor was instructed to write Supt. H. 0. Saxvik regarding the matter. Supt. Saxvik will be asked to have the teachers in the public schools bring to the attention of their pupils the dangers involved in street play- ing and to inform them that the city ordinance which prohibits playing in the streets will be strictly enforced. Children have been rather care- less of late, some of the commission- ers say, and will run out into the middle of the street after a football or in playing other games without giving any attention as to whether| one in the car was jinging and mak- an automobile is approaching. Thejing a noise and this was the reason Police have been instructed to put a|he stopped the machine. i stop to street playing. Jury Must Decide If Wife Has Right to Spoon With Husband Cleveland, Sept. 27.—(AP)— Judgment for $3,675 was award- ed today by a common pleas court jury to Mr. and Mrs. Jo- seph Mack, who had brought suit against Police Sergeant Frank a Rolfe, alleging that he arrested them ai had them jailed when he iound them kiss- ing in their parked automobile, Cleveland, Sept. 27—(AP) — The question of a wife’s right to sit on her husband’s lap in the back seat of their automobile and “spoon” with him without interference from the police rested with a jury in com- mon pleas court today. Testimony in the $15,000 damage suit brought by Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mack against Police Sergeant Frank L. Rolfe was concluded yesterday. One night in July last year Mr. and Mrs. Mack, a young couple, were returning from a picnic with several other persons. Sergeant Rolfe and a police squad were out looking for a gang of rowdies. Lights suddenly were thrown on the Macks’ automo- bile and disclosed Mrs. Mack upon her husband’s lap in the act of kiss- in sogeant Rolfe d ged them fi Sergeant Rolfe drag; them from the car and took them to jail, where they were held six hours, the Macks testified. Sergeant Rolfe testified that some avs Y WIFE h CY rte amiing "to the office more mornings when I woke up with @ grouch, just because no man could drink a cup of the wonderful coffee she makes without feeling that the world is @ pretty good place to live in” If you've never tried Nash's Delicious, phone your grocer and get ready for complete coffee satisfaction. ¢ only inthe sealed red tin by qour grocer: fever in ball PRICE OWENS ELEVATOR CO. General Grain Business Prania and Mill Feeds Feed Grinding Mercer County Lignite Coal Phone 11 710 Front Ave. Mis tien todas Utilities Co. Phone 727 ing a repaid ‘Hf you are contemplating owning The Bismarck Building and Loan association has loaned over $1,500,000 on Bismarck homes during the last twenty-one years. ‘The association always has funds on hand to assist in erect- new home or purchasing one already built. Loans are on the monthly plan the same as rent. : apne Melting 20d Lean Asnosintion s home and need financial It is easy to get a Heating Service Man, Don’t go through another winter with an unsatisfactory heating system If you want advice on home heating just turn to your! or send the coupon to the local Holland Furnace branch. Trained Holland men will advise you, without cost on proper construction or adjust- ment of basements, chimneys or anything pertaining to the home heating systems. The man you will get by calling the Holland Furnace Company will be a trained heating service man from one of the 522 Holland Service branches which make up the world’s home heating organzation. He will take care of your furnace problems, even to cleaning and the smallest repairs for your present Holland Service includes consultation—the making installation work—and of home heating guaranteed. plans—the That is why every Holland customer is pleased. These men do the whole job— do it well, and we assume complete responsibility. If you want to know how to heat your home for health and comfort, call a Holland man today. HOLLAND FURNACE COMPANY World’s Largest Installers ef Home Heating Systems £23 Foneney Ouned fetes ond Servies Seations. |p a ee eee = | Vttotiend Booklet. Furnace Co., Bismarck, N, | ( a breach gee zoe sal zee Without olland oa my pest, please 1 BISMARCK BRANCH 216 MAIN PHONE 356 -yurnaces “Make\Warm Friends” TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1927 estimated at $200,000 by Norman E, Cloud, local manager of the firm. +The fire, of undetermined origin, war discovered at 3 a. m. Minneapolis Blaze Does $200,000 Damage He said he thought the Macks were fibbing about being married because he The metal croved so hot that the ~ never heard of a man and wife being Minneapolis, Sept. 27. — () — Alfiremen made no effor:s to pour 80 loving. huge pile of stzel shavings, saturat-|water on it. They were f to ed with oil, was turned into a moun- |let it burn itself out, while they de- The blasting away of Gibraltar to| tain of fire when a blaze destroyed | voted their attention to saving establish better circulation between|the plant of the Massey Concrete|What they could of the rest of the ed oes the Bete has| Products company early today, | Plant. nm recommended by a Euro; i ie ——— hydrographer. a ae: aenelitaey which ft housed was [Tribune want ads bring results, my STARS J You ICOME HENRY,-GET UP AND CHILOREN MUST FIX THE FIRE, THIS HOUSE ¥ TWONBERTE | GET RIGHT BACK ISAS COLO AS A BARN. THOSE CHILOREN | INTO BEO AND ARE UB IN THIS | STAY THERE —~' 4 Coto House -1 MUST Go AND SEE] WARMS UP ‘Teears ALLY A FELLOW | YESSIR, THAT'S RIGAT@ CANT LAY ABED ONE 9 /"MINNEAPOLIS HEAT REGULATOR’ - Insta ‘ IT RIGAT AWAY- I'VE i BEEN WITHOUT ONE TOO LONG ALREADY - ‘ wel alas TAING jE DI MONDAY == MORNING -. A “il F hour’s sl i ‘ or an extra 8 sleep every Morning « :—call up C. C. LARSE " e 'e | Phone 107 2C6 Broadway The Vv Mh (NEAPOLIS” \ EAT REGULATOR ? COAL~GAS~O1L “Democracy is institutionalized self-respect,” says William Allen White in an article in B Harper’s Magazine of last March. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is one of the most democratic organizations in Amer- a ican industry—a working example of Mr. White's definition of democracy. e In the old European scheme of things, self- respect was necre only to the favored few. Powerful landlords and independent tradesmen knew it. But the a worker was a serf without unity to advance, forever bound to the sad lot he inherited at birth. “Since the beginning man has been strivin, for just one thing—the right to be his own an not another's, for the thing called equality of opportunity,’ the article quoted goes on to say. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) is one of the large industrial units that have helped to institutionalize respect in America by providing equality of opportunity for all. All em in this Company have the same . Chance to advance. is achieved by hard work and aphity. Those who start at the bottom often reach the top—and the records of the men on the Board of Directors offer thrilling illustrations of this fact. Equality of opportunity gives incentive to efficiency, Every employe of this Company . takes pride in his own job, that, Vp oe recognized aporecated, empleo aad by Sa means o! unity, worki ry of whi