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PAGE TEN IPLH. TOURISTS LIKE BISMARCK N. D. Capital One of Places Editor Would Like to Wax Eloquent About Continuing his story of a motor trip from Chicago to Yellowstone park over the National Parks high- way, P. F. Lowder, editor of “The Motorist,” official organization of the Motorists Association of Illin- ois, in the November issue tells of) the party’s visit to Bismarck and; * Peaceful Valley ranch at Medora. Mr. Lowder, with a party of Chi- cago and Twin City newspaper men were overnight guests in Bismarck on the tour. That part of his story relating to the stop here follows: i ‘ t i i ‘ ‘ } ‘ $ H ‘ 4 | i} In my two preceding siories of} ' the trip to Yellowstone National) Park over the National Parks High-| way I told you that I had set forth| to obtain first hand information for} you about what a motor tourist will find if he travels to the Yellow-; stone over che N. P. H. You know) what was found along th: way in Madison, Baraboo, Kilbourne, Mau- ston, Nev: Lisbon, Sparta and other) Wisconsin towns and cities; what! we found in Winona, St. Paul, Min- Dogrone Doggy! _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE the time of her death: DIES IN WESYT Se st esac” : N. D. Schools Get Only 42 Per Cent of Apportionment Schools entitled to receive state " —— aid received only 42 cents of each Minot, N. D., Dec. 16.—(—Mrs./dollar to which they were entitled W. H. Parker, 85, pioneer resident! under the law, a statement by the of Minot and formerly of Devils|State department of public nistruc- Lake, died yesterday at San Diego, aiekon Cc: lif, dink tor Ward the | At the last apportionn.2nt $219,- alif., according to word received) 466.07 was distributed to 1,504 here. schools. Of this number 405 were Born December 29, 1842, at Ve-|consolidated, 49 were graded and nango, Pa., Elizageth Delila Heim- | 1,050 were one-room schools, Failure baugh was reared to you.g woman-/to appropriate enough money to hood in the cultured surroundings| meet the apportionment schedule of a long established community. outlined by law is given a: the rea- Anxious to provide their daugh-!son for paying only 42 cents on‘the ter with the best of educational op- | dollar. portunities, Elizabeth's parents, Ja-| The number of rural, graded and| cob and Mary Heimbaugh, sent her | consolidated schools which received to Hagerstown, Pa. to round out! state aid for the school year of 1926- \her school carer, and soor after her, 27 follows, b: i: 3 return she was married to William | Barnes, 37; H. Parker, the ceremony taking! Bottineau, 32 place’ on October 3, 1865 {13; Burl Pioneer Resident of Devils Lake and Minot Passes Away at Age of 85 Divide, 73; Dunn, | 11; Grand Forks, 13; Hettinger, | oure, 65; | McIntosh, 2; | , 41; Mercer, fained an interest in the busiriess at Alienists’ TV HREE D.B.C. MEN the first time | than two years Romain Fielding, film player, Report tifore tho actually fired the fatal| who 16 years ago was said to have Is Greatly Reduced) shots. been, one sf, the most popular men| ; pons Ee Cincinnati, Dee. 16,—()—The SCREEN ACTOR DIES Chronle Divenses a Specialty ery” 4 I lif, Dec. 15.—P)— 116 Wourth Street. Phone 240 4,500 word’ alienists’ report, in BP al ge ek Des, 15-0 | Regular Elks meeting to! ee “ which George Remus was found to have been sane when he shot and killed his wife here last October 6, was stripped to three paragraphs today by a ruling of Judge Ches-|* ter R, Shook. He sanctioned the objection of Charles H. Elston, co-counsel with Remus, to introducing anything more of the report than the deduc- tion of the three psychiatrists that they had made a study of Remus, the Remus family, heard the evi. dence of the nearly five weeks of the trial and finally concluded Remus was sane. . Eliminated were three separate confessions by Remus to tle alien- ists of his planning to slay his wife, ARE PROMOTED From distant, cities come new stories of success attainéd by grad- th here today tooth caused the deat! : \ FEL BRAKES | FOR.’ hall. FOUR-W AMERICA'S FASTEST FOUR, _ DODGE BROTHERS ADD NEW EQUIPMENT AT NO INCREASE |. ah IN PRICE j FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16, 1927 ee aoe h eae. me neapolis, St. Cloud, Sauk Center, Osakis, Alexandria and Fergus Falls, Minnesota; and what we found at Fargo and Jamestown, North Dakota. From Jamestown, where we wert so delightfully entertained, drove to Bismarck. At this won- derful little city we learned once and for all time that North Da- kota hospitality, as exemplified in Bismarck, is a deep down and hearty sentiment. We were expect- ed for dinner at seven o'clock in the evening. Due to a series of inad-) vertencies, some of them mechan- ical and -ome of them caused by an excess of time spent along the highway, we did not arrive on time. Gracious Hostesses The Prince Hotel, where the tour- ing editors were to stop; kept the dinner warm. Eight, 9 and 10 o'clock came and went and no edi- tors. The first dinner was aban- doned and another meal was cooked when we finally arrived at 12 mid- night. And what a midnight sup- per we had.. Personally supervised and directed by Mrs. Emily Knight Sheldon and Mrs. Edith Hughes, than whom I know no more grac- ious hostesses, the supper party and ono iy aera little official welcome followed it, were gladdening to the hearts of 16 hungry writers. ‘Among the reception committee which made things pleasant for us were O. W. Roberts, national presi- dent cf the National Parks High- association, and Mrs. Roberts; J.-J. Ermatinger, secretary of the North Dakota Highway commission, and Mrs. Ermatinger; P. E. Byrne, author of a number of well known western historical volumes, and yrne; and Henry J. me- land, pre. ‘dent of the Association of Commerce, and Mrs. Duemeland. “ They Liked Bismarck If I said the things I would like to say about some of the places we visited on our way to the west, this story about highways would sound, in some places, like a paid adver- tisement. Bismarck is one of the places I would crave to wax elo- quent about. Sad to say my edi- torial capacity will not permit such eloquence. I am not alone in my usiasm about that city. One of the bachelors of the party confided in me that *e is going to spend his honeymoon at the Prince Hotel. That’s some pretty sweet recom- mendation, isn’t it? Bismarck has much to recommend it to the tourist. There are plenty pa ae hotels, there is a municipal ming fool, where you may re- move the grime of travel and at the same tir.: enjoy a swim; there is ps eared tourist camp, well with all sanitary conveniences; # a you will like the people. We all Entertained at Medora jismarck came run to jis ranch is what is generally known as a ranch” where easterners are ed. The cowboys put on a for us and sang and told stories around the open fire in the This was a side trip and meely a patter pat argon pro- vided for pai yy A. W. Tracy, the secretary of the National Parks ey association. who participated in our welcome and our entertainment at d where the ranch is located, Carl Olson, “Shy” Osterhaut, After Bi Peaceful Valley Ranch. rodeo evening. alter Ray, Bert Hammond and “wild Bil” MeCarthy 14, WALKS 22 MILES Kan. ‘When he ‘was 60 years old, A. N. Miller, re- tired business man, walked be 2 ‘Read the Lucky Strike Coal] — in liced, tomorrow's | panion. | | When the Great Northern started | ito advance i s toward Dev , with the keen} that character- i . > Mi A ucted | Gaim : as Tre ag 45, They ope rated a hotel at_ Dev \ " Dh aft Aiest/ Lake during the y of 1885, and a jcabin boy. His smiling swank is at’ year later, when it became apparent | | the service of 360 passengers who) that the Great rm was to con- | recently set out from New York on tinue its we | the S.'S. Empress of Australia for) and Mrs. i ress ja 183-day cruise ’round the world.|” From -lers of the original townsite of Mi-| , , Mrs. Pa ceived the flat- we Setar taaear w tevng@otfer of | ring cgivens foe's | small sum, her choice of any corner | lot in the city if she would construct | Philadelphia, Dec. 16.—(?\—Faith|# hotel. Mrs. Parker selected a healing muy be “foolish,” but there! Comer where the present Elks home | is nothing in the laws of Pennsyl.|i8, situated, and purchased the ad-| vania to prohibit the placing of a|Joining property on the south, and pinch of salt in your shoe and your there she superintended the con-| bed to cure insomnia. x struction of the Parker house | Justice Trexler, of the state gu-|of the most elaborate hostelries in perior court, has’so ruled in_ re-|the then new northwest. versing the conviction by the Ches- ter county courts of an associate minister of the First Spiritual Church of Pottstown of violating the fortune-telling act of 1861. The minister, David B. Blair, Chester, had been sntenced to 30 days in jail ond to pay a fine of $50 after state policemen testified he was advised to place a pincl’ of salt in his shoes and put salt in his bed in the form “be oved to Minot. | d White, own-| ‘ Still Retained Interest Subsequently the was destroyed by fire, and in 1895 Mrs. Parker and her son Clarence} leased the Leland hotel in this city! from Allen Tompkins. A year later; they purchased the business. When an addition was later made to the hotel, it was named the Leland- Parker, and Mrs. Parker still re- -| Williams, 102. rd expansion, Mr, | be Parker house! less than two day Mountrail, '88; Nel- 10; Pembina, 14;{ so Pier Raggom, 32; Renville, ‘olette. | 19; Sarg + Sioux, | Slope, teele, 16: | utsma’ j 5 Trail, alsh, Ward, 31; Wells, 3: } | SMOKERS’ ACADEMY | HA Pai An academy of smokers is gs organized Paris, with’ women as some of the charter mem- bers. The greatest drag on the or- ganization just now is the question of whether women ould smoke pipes. Henri ernois, “author, leads the opposition and also con- tends that women should not smoke cigars. GOOD REMEDY FOR BAD COUGH “A hard persistent wearing cough kept me aW&ke for several nights. } and when my druggist recommen: ed Foley's Honey and Tar Con pound, I was eager to try it. In cough was satisfied entirely gone, user from Nebraska. No opiates, no chloroform, a really valuable remedy for coughs, col throat and bronchial ir ms. Accept; no substitute for Foley's Honey and Tar Compound. Get the genuine.—; Sold Everywhe' Ad | of a cross when he complained to Blair that he could not sleep at night. Montana Rancher’s Will Is Set Aside Oakland, Calif.. Dec. 16.—(P)— The superior court here yesterday set aside the will of the late Ben- jamin D. Philips, former Montana cattle king, on the ground that the will’s provisions are contrary to the California law. The will was attacked by Mrs. Sarah Newbell, of Oakland, Phillips’ daughter. Her attorneys said the court decision would give Mrs. New- bell immediate possession of a one- fifth share of the $2,000,000 estate. The will left the estate equally to the five children, with provisions that the daughters should receive only the interest on their shares, Capitol WILDER which were to be held in trust until|| With * the daughters’ children reach the ‘ age of 25 years. JOAN CRAWFORD Philips died at Rochester, Minn., ROY D’ARCY in November, 1926. A new, bigger, more thrill- ¢ ing western! Riding, ¢maz- Ing rescues, Indian warfare, romance! Regular Elks meeting to- night, Elks hall. Stan Laurel Comedy Tonight — Friday and Saturday WINNERS OF With a Real Story! Theatre NESS HE See It! . Fox News uates of Dakota Business College, Four-wheel brakes of the latest A brilliant by Fargo: V. M. 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Home of K-F-Y-R Mile-a-minute performance! ing that money has no ; .25 miles to the gallon at 25 eskg putes tin den of q miles per hour! \ __ transportation, WANTED : Skunks, Jack rabbit skins ' ° and all kinds of furs, also cattle hides, horsehides and all kinds of junk. Northern Hide & Fur Company Temporarily located In Farmers Creamery Bldg Box 265 Bismarck, N. D. . M. B. GILMAN CO. — : ‘ . Broadway at Second St. Phone 808 . Bismarek DopceE BROTHERS, INC PLUGIN! > No Batteries Plug in and play! Just as simple as turning on the electric light! ‘That is what Kolster means by elec . teic reception. : ; : And not merely electric, but electrifying in ies Tie hnnes solemn enels atene = / singer or speaker just into the’room. pcp pie omen as ane par Srp : yout face in the mirror. You hear what is broad- cast. Why hear anything else? 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