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| | | SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1928 DRAWINGS MADE FOR DISTRICT CAGE TOURNEY Bismarck Faces Napoleon in First Game at 3:30 P. M., Next Thursday Fifteen basketball teams of the third district of the North Dakota Interscholatic league will swing in- to action on the state training school gymnasium floor next Thursday. The tourney is billed for March 1, 2 and 3. Governor A. G. Sorlie made the drawings for the first round games at a meeting of district officials in the executive offices at the state capitol this morning. jismarck will face Napolcon in the first game at 3:30 p. m. Thurs- doy, Mandan time. Turtle Lake and New Salem will play at 4:30 p. m. Steele and Linton open the eve- ning games at 7:30 p. m. Garrison and Washburn were drawn to close the first day of the tournament be- ginning at 8:30 p. m. Friday's Schedule On Friday, Wilton and Wishek will meet at 9 a. m. Mandan and Underwood will clash at 10 a. m. and Ashley and Hazelton at 11 a. m. McClusky drew a bye to com- plete the first round drawings. The second round will begin at 2:30 p. m. Friday with the winner of the Bismarck-Napoleon game laying the winner of the Turtle ike-New Salem game. At 3:30 p. m. the winner of the Steele-Linton set-to will tangle with the winner of the Garrison- Beginni 730 p. m. Friday, the poten the Witton-Wishek vontest will fight with the victor of the Mandan-Underwood feud. At 8:30 p. m. McClusky will play its first game against the winner of the Hazelton-Ashley affair. __ Semi-final games will begin at 1:30 a. = hee ieten second ame to al 330 a. m. "Title Gene Saturday Night Tournament officials have an- nounced that the consolation game will start at 7:30 p.m. Saturda nd the championship struggle will ve called at 8:30 p. m. All records for the number of en- mies in the third district have been broken this year and the biggest and most successful tournament in the history of the state association is predicted by tournament and dis- * trict officials. GETS LIFE SENTENCE Cambridge, Mass., Feb. 25.—(AP) —Convicted of killiig his sweet- heart in what he said was a suicide pact, Joseph Foster Buckley, 26, of Weston, has been sentenced to life imprisonment. A ‘jury last night found him guilty of murder in sec- ond degree for the death of Grace E. Mills of Waltham, 19. —_—_—— NOTICE OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE SALB Notice is hereby given that default Bridge Over Little | Missouri River Will Be Ready on June 1 Confidence that the bridge over the Little Missouri river in McKen- zie county will be ready for use on! or before June 1 was expressed here today by Clifford Johnson, head of the bridge division of the state high- hag Teta ‘ ¢ piers have been built and stecl now is being “swung” on the structure, Johnson said. Reports re- ceived at his office from the engi- neer in charge indicate that the con- tractors will be ready to begin the work of pouring the concrete floor as soon as the danger of freezing has passed. An appropriation for the bridge was made it the last regular ses- sion of the legislature, the legisla- ture casting aside the rule that such appropriations should be made only for bridges over navigable streams or on the borders of the state. It will bring thousands of acres of land in McKenzie county much near- er to railroad shipping points than at present. SIGNATURES ON ‘WET’ PETITIONS BEING CHECKED Thomas W. Gales and F. L. Watkins Representing N. D. Anti-Saloon Leagye Thomas W. Gales and F. L. Wat- kins, representing the North Dakota Anti-Saloon League, were here today checking over the petitions filed by the Better Citizenship association which is seeking repeal of the pro- hibition clause of the state constitu- tion. The petitions ask, that repeal of the clause be submitted to a vote of the people at the primary election next June. Mrs. Elizabeth Preston Anderson, head of the state Women’s Christian Temperance Union, who had been ex- pected to aid in the work of checking the petitions, had not arrived in Bismarck this morning, Gales said, “ree he had expected her to be ere. Both the number of signatures and the authenticity of some of the names may be challenged, Gales said Precision Methods Reach New Climax ‘in Auto Industry Manufacturing precision has. reached a height of accuracy in American automobile production that in the opinion of competent judges was never before attained in any large indsutry. Chrysler engineers, who have been foremost in the evolution of scien- tific processes by which this pre- cision was gained, enumerate a ong list of tools and machines which were invented to deliver quantity pro- duction under the new standards of minute exactness and also of new gauges which were required to test the products thus manufactured. Every branch of science has been ransacked for aid in the develop- ment of the new processes. Ingen- ious machines were created. Minute- ly exact scales and gauges were built. The latest discoveries ‘in photography, in ultra-ray research, in delicate gauge adjustment, in weights and measures, are utilized to secure equipment suitable for the higher standards of accuracy. hrysler manufacturing practices and processes together constitute “Standardized Quality,” a principle which enforces the same scrupulously close limits—the same rigid rule of engineering exactness—the same absolute accuracy and precision in the manufacturing of every part of all Chrysler models— “52,” “62,” “72” and Imperial “80.” Women Visitors Are Interested in Buick Women visitors at the auto show will note in the Buick models for 1928 the continuation of a policy t> which Buick has long been devoted, the adaptation of its motor cars t- the requirements of women drivers as well as of men. Few cars on the road today en- joy such universal favor among women as does Buick. The adop- tion of four-wheel brakes, a few years ago, and its resultant effect upon the safety of driving, had its immediate reflection in extending : ON MOTOR ROW the dealers have been shipped from the plants. In addition to this a number of cars have been shipped abroad. There are thirty-two Ford assem- bly plants in the including Fordson, are already in operation, and a definite schedule to put nine others in operation in the immediate future has been laid out. These nine plants are at Nor- fol, Seattle, St. Louis, Chester (near Philadelphia, es Twin Cities, Sommerville (near Boston), Memphis and Buffalo. The plant at Norfolk will begin operations this week and Seattle will follow the week after. The others will be op- ened in the order named, it is said, and by the end of March there will be fifteen plants in operation. Oakland Company in Record Production|¥"» The highest ioe! eerie in the history of the Oakland Motor Car companny—1 °,774 Oakland and Pontiac Sixes—is being eclipsed b:; a record February production sched- ule of 22,268 cars, it is announced Ae . Tracy, vice president in charge of sales. The extent to which recent plant expansion at the Oakland and Pon- tiac Six factories have increased production capacity is revealed by the following comparison with pro- duction figures during the corre- sponding months of previous years: 1926 1927 1928 January ......5,785 . 8.088 19,774 February .....8,54! 9,684 22,268 “The fact that our totals for ° >th January and February of this year exceed by a wide margin the com- bined 1926 and 1927 production dur- ing those respective’ months is the best evidence “hat the Oakland Mo- tor Car company will. be an even greater factor in the automobile in- dustry during 1928,” sa’i Mr. Tracy. “Our schedule for the present is upon orders sen’ in by our deale. «. ie Oakland Motor Car company sold 191,000 Oakland and Pontiac Sixes during 1927, which represent- ed an increase of more than 40 per cent over the total for the preceding year. If the. demand for motor cars Buick’s popularity among women, and since that time Buick has in- augurated numerous refinements whose cumulative effect has been to after he had begun the work of examining the petitions. A simi- larity of handwriting leads him to believe, Gales said, that in some cases the names of more than one rson were signed by the same dividual. It was particularly ap- parent, he said, that many husbands apperenely took the liberty of not only signing their own names but the names of their wives. Several Irregularities Found In some cases, he said, names were signed on sheets which were not attached to the petitions and the secretary of state will be asked to reject them. In other cases, he said, the Better Citizenship association has been made in the conditions of that certain Mortgage made by Heimo Slirtola of Wing, county of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, Mort- gagor, to The First National Bank of Bismarck, County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota Mortgages. dated the 23rd day of Rahal 1926, to Sige Le tery :. The sum o! Hundred Ten & 00/100ths Dollars ($1910.00) and which Mortgage was duly filed in the office of the Regis- ter of Deeds of Burleigh County, State of North Dakota, on the 25th day of March, 1926, and which default is of the following nature, to-wit: ‘That the mortgagor has failed to pay the indebtedness when due or any part thereof, and that there is claimed to be due on said Mortgage at date of this notice the sum of Two Thou- sand One Hundred Sixty-six and pee eases Dollars for prin- cipal and interest. "And that said woriges® will be foreclosed by a sale of the personal property in such Mortgage and here- inafter described, at public auction, agreeably to the statutes in such caso made and provided, at the front door of the postoffice of the Village of McKenzie, in the Village of McKenzie, in the County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, at the hour of two o'clock P, M., on Tuesday, the 6th day of March, 1928. That personal prop- erty which will be sold to satisfy said Mortgage is described as follows, to- wit: ‘Two Deering binders 7 & 8 foot cut; 1 10-foot Kentucky Dri); | 't: © Mower; 3 John Deere Gang in.; 18 ft. Dise; 2 wow Warws pies tire form wagons Dosble Breet neckyokes and canvases for the fnachine described. One Geld- name Billy; 1 8 yrs. old E27, name zeny. mare; 1 geld old buckskin 1100 name Rye; 4 ings coming 4 years old, not named; raised them. ‘Ten Cows 3 to 8 i ol whit Hereford Bull, 8 yrs. old; 14 Biers. ire Heifers, 1 year old, red and white. It is the intention of mortgagor to mortgage all cattle owned by him at MB ated ‘Feb, 29. 1928 a ‘eh. 29, 1928, i: THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK, By Zuger & Tillotson, Its Attorneys. 2/25) ——— CALL FOR BURLEIGH COUNTY CONVENTION: Pursuant to the direction of the Republican State Central Committee &@ mass meeting of the clectors of Burleigh county, whose loyalty po- tleally tg, first ‘and only to the, Tte- ismarck, on Saturday, rel A 1928, at the hour of three o'clock in the afternoon for the purpose of elect- ing 12 delegates to the Republican State Convention to be held at James- Ne Dakota, ‘on Anureaay, 1928, which’ convention will 8 candidates for nomination ¥ the ular primary election 4 eld June 27th, 1928, one Republican ndidate for United States Senator nd a Republican candidate for Rep- sentative in Congress in each of the ee districts in this state. . Republicans, Je or female, ing the qualifications above ‘and who have not Rprtiele uy 1938 in any f any partic- e year a organisation not in participate in euch, convention. Burleigh County Rep. Committee, MH. ATKINSON, Burle! ¢ itt igh County x rome ee, Ee raphe for lots 15 and 16 block ppsersiened 1 lat of G Bis- era mown ts"the “dgeree. eas up to and in- = are asked re iSaPBated eaniat” cid etc ‘ierme ‘ot sale will be cash and the cant reserved to reject any or all Ee pain : platelet: Ma er Sch een (3 /28-273, apparently miscounted the number of names on petitions, The number of signatures as announced by the Better Citizenship association when the petitions were filed was 23,009. The Anti-Saloon League is not inclined to fight the Wet movement on technical grounds, Gales said, but expressed the belief that the petitions should be regular as to form before they are approved and the question of repealing the pro- hibition clause placed on the ballot. Irregularities in the petitions will be presented to the executive com- mittee of the Anti-Saloon League, he said, and any action which may be taken to contest them will be directed by that body. His own belief, he said, is that irregularities disclosed by his check will be challenged by a court action. Gales said he may bring a sten- ographer here to copy the names signed to the petitions and that the| q; names may be published or lists sent to each county. Many ministers have asked for copies of the list, he strengthen its position greatly. In the models for 1928, .refin2- ments which appeal to the exacting feminine driver are particularly ny- merous. There ts first of all the new stylish Jow - swung effect, achieved by means of the double- drop frame, without sacrifice of head room or rcad clearance. There is a new vogue in motor car beauty, achieved by new colors in lustrous Duco and a new. interior treatment. Comfort of riding has been mate- rially increased by the addition of hydraulic shock absorbers front and rear on all models, in conjunction wtih redesigned cantilever springs. The same improvements which advance a car's standing among women have their effect upon its position among men. Neither beai- ty nor comfort is overlooked when a man is buying a car, particularly if the same car boasts unusual re- liability, fine performance, and ex- treme operating ease. Buick’s ef- fort has therefore been to embody in its 1928 line all these points, and to develop them all well beyond pres- ent-day standards, 'Ford Output Is Increasing Daily All the 8,800 Ford dealers in the United States have been supplied with sample cars, it is said, and deliveries to customers have begun. The deliveries have not gone very far yet, but from now on they are expected to increase rapidly day by jay. { As evidence of a definite start it said. - Commenting on the plans for con- testing the wet movement, Gales said close cooperation has been es- tablished between his organization and the W. C. T. U. and that a joint committee of the two organizations probably will direct the dry effort. _—e ia-| Tender, Aching, Swollen Feet In_just Five Minutes Those Sore, ‘ender, Aching Feet Get Amazing Relief. Moone’s Emerald Oil Is Guaranteed. You probably feel like a lot of other people that about all you can do is dust some powder in your shoes or give your feet a special foot bath and let it #, at that, but don’t be ~foolish. MaRe up your mind today that you are going to sive your feet a real chance to get we! Emerald Oil. The very first application will give you relief and a few short treatments will thoi hly _con- vince you that by‘ sticking faith- fully to it for a short while your foot troubles will be a thing of the past. Don't expect a single bottle to do it all at once but one bottle we know will show you beyond all ques- tion that you have at last discov- ered the way to solid foot comfort. BR gy ned that eens serail is @ clean, powerful, pene’ Antiseptic Oil Bhat does he pro ne leave a greasy residue and that it must give complete sat rm money cheerfully or . | Go to any good druggist today and get an original bottle of Moone’s is started that, includir dealers cars and those in the. ham Is of customers, there are now 27, new Fords in service. If any dea have not received their samples it is because they have been temporarily held up in branch distribution de- pots, from which they will be shipped in the next few days. The home office knows of no such case, however. Its records show that All the famous enough sample cars to supply all continues at its oresent high level we confidently ex that in 1928 ‘ the volume of Oakland-Pontirc busi- ness again will show a 40 per cent increase. No Squeaks or Rattles in Victory Six Bodies No builder of the finest custom bodies could take greater care or | devise more effective means to eliminate all likelihood of squeaks, rattles and body noises than have Dodge Brothers engineers in design- ing and peta Yee | the new Victory Six, declares M. B. Gilman of the M. B. Gilman company, local deal- er. “The panels of the double wall steel body,” Mr. Gilman explains. “are lined is thick ce Aree a insure against any yo} drumming or of pds ye board ef- fect when the car travels over un- even pavements. Beneath the rear floor carpet, securely cemented to the floor, is a heavy pad of sound- proofing material and on the under side of the rubber mat of the driv- er’s compartment is a similar pad. 85 per cent of the entire outside surface of the body, exclusive of the window ome » is -lined with sound-proofing felt. This felt is ef- the body but also as heat insula- tion, makin; ter and cooler in summer. “The polished plate glass win- dows slide in noiseless runways of felt and when. lowered rest on rub- ber supports. “So accurate are the dies used in the mammoth presses which form the double walled steel doors and the door openings in the bodies that the. desired clearances at the top, bottom and sides of the doors are maintained within very close limits. The adjustable rubber sone against which the doors strike when closed are of: liberal dimensions, The ‘dove tails’ which serve as. guides when the doors are closed are pad- ded with cushions of live rubber arm ‘with metal to protect against wear.. There is no ‘tinny’ Oriental Dishes served at The Patterson, formerly McKenzie Hotel Chinese Chop Suey Myshroom Chop Suey Chicken Chop Suey Fried Noodle Chow Mein Chicken. Yatcamein Egg Foyoung Sub Gum Warmein These dishes are prepared to order by Orientai 4 cooks FOR Six-room modern house and SALE bath, porch, hot water heat- ing plant, east front.: Double’ garage. All in fine con- | dition. Priced for quick sale at $8,800.00. | $900.00 cash, . balance on monthly payments, Owner leaving city; Oc- cupancy March Ist, 1928.. Phone 188, Investors Mortgage Security Company, Inc, POCKET when shipped Let es me hideo we corer etx doce not ave to tage niin oper i SKINNING. KNIFE 8. bri ‘sHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The body engineers state that over | fective not only in sound-proofing the car warmer in win- ° sound when a Victory door is sla:-med.” " Quality Leadership _; in Light Car Field of the Whippet is said to be due to] the qualit; {ship that | formance over a long period of time. material and workman- ve gone into it together i+a hieh standard of proved per- same basic principles of the inal Whippet are embraced in; Is Accorded Whippet tise tine although there have Well informed: ‘automobile men|improvéments which continue to accord the Whippet the! nited States. Six, guality leadership in the light car|of the car. brought about ae in exterior and interior have _ been the perfection The Whippet is now eld. They base this admission of |equipped: with full crowned fenders superiority in the high standard of! performace that has made this car conspicuous in the Whippet ficld since its initial introduction more than 19 months ago, and by a com- parison with automobiles of other makes selling in the same price field. More than 150,000 of these modern | light four-cylinder cars are now in| the hands of drivers, it being es mated that they have travelled a total of nearly a half billion mile Notable ls, for speed, power, stamina, fuel economy and servic ability have been established by the ‘Whigpet. over the 18-month period. It fs further pointed out that the Whippet, when it was first. intro- to the motor . car _buyers,! embraced certain features in light) car engineering which it was de- clared would set a new trend in the | type of the future car in this class. ese features included four-wheel brakes, low center of gravity, full force lubrication, gravity fuel s tem, oil and fuel economy, great power with increased speed range, roomy interiors, greater comfort, and a generally higher standard of per- : formance throughout. H A survey of the recent models in-, troduced in the light car field dis-| close that ‘they have followed the| trend first established by the Whip-! pet, embracing certain features, dis- tinctly Whippet. ‘A complete an- Witenes discloses that the| Whippet continues to embrace qual-| ities and features that are lacking | in other cars selling in the same or, nearby price class. i The unusual attention that is being riveted on the 1928 line of Whippet | models -indicates that these smart with a di car ane val, widel; i ‘aday performed 1,111 aerial loops in a monoplane, world’s recoru of 1.008 loops m minutes. SS CHRYSLER p flange, this giving the m more dashing appear- HOLMAN'S RECORD BROKEN Paris, Feb, 26—(@)—Alfred Fron known acrobatic flyer, bettering the four-cylinder cars during the coming year will overshadow the great pop- ularity they have enjoyed up to this ee critical observers declare. TAR | Children like it. Mothers endorse it. All INLY in Chrysler “52,” atits new low prices of %670 upwards, can you buy these qualities — Characteristic Chrysler speed and dash, usable with complete comfort because of unrivaled engine and tiding smoothness; : H Full-sized, roomy bodies of exceptional fineness; Smartness and beauty of line and color that set the pace for the industry; known in the building of any other low-priced car; CORWIN-CHURCHILL MOTORS, INC. Bismarck, N. D. jof accepting deposits which he knew to be insolvent, was affirmed by the supreme court to- lives in lifornia, was sentenced to a term of from four to 10 years in connec- tion with the affairs of the closed day. i preme CONVICTION: OF RODMAN UPHELD Supreme Court Affirms Ver- dict Against Former Wil- liston Banker Rodman, who. yow court specified There you have the smart New Chrysler “52.” At its new low prices and sensa- tional values, public pref- erence s it as more than ever the greatest car in the low-priced field. See this great car and ask for a demonstration. an ar ‘ Sensational New Lower Prices 2-doorSedan,$670;Coupe,$670; Roadster (with ramble seat), $670; Touring, $695; 4-door Sedan, $720; DeLuxe Coupe (with remble seat), $720; DeLuxe Sedan, $790. All prices f.0.b. Detroit, subjed to current Federal excise tax. Chrysler dealers ave in position to extend the conventence ef time ‘Payments, us 19 alleged t Conviction of L. J. Rodman, ‘for- ance, Window reveals and remote} mer Williston banker, on a charge door controls also have been added. in a bank by Charles (Speed) Holman of Min- Williams County State bank, of neapolis Feb. 12. Fronval looped which he presider continuotisly for four hours and 56) The appeal of the case to the su- errors: which occurred at the ' but the court found mo- was prejudicial. longest records pages. The co etror w preme court, ‘tie appellants’ ”) containing nearly. 1,700 decision, reviewed all angles of the ¢ 33 pages long, Lucas Bik. Drugless Physician | Bismarck, 5. (Ariro | Theatre Monday June Collyer int “WOMAN WISE” Wednesday “Alaskan Adventures” the scores of. ic represents: For have is fossaavty obs of ino price with bodies by Fisher the vivid etyling, and with sturdy cylinder performance and impreved by ths loves mm it and by the unparalleled value that : The more youcee of the N terior roominess which re- Series Pontiac Six-the on ie from the hs ie you learn of its superior six- Fisher craftsmanship. Here is the only six of its price employing the Crots-flow radiator ae masterstroke ‘engi! hich peers To of wens teeouel ling and freezingand assures con- brant conta eater eappieate- ture. And is che only sixof its with the GMR cy! and producing the smooth, silent, economical power possible by its ecien- -a Successful Six now winning Even Greater Success tific principles of design. Scores of additional features distinguish the New Series Pontiac Six from all other cars in its class—many of them features that none but a General Motors could possibly include. They tell you why the New Series Pontiac Six leads its field in value by such a tremendous margin—why it is the one car you will want toexamine in detail and drive before you buy any car. General Motors’ Lowest Priced Six with Fisher Body-GMR Cylinder Head and Crossflow Raudiater 2-DOOR SEDAN Coupe + + + + $748 Sport Roadster + $745 Sport Cabriolet - $795: Sport Landau Seden $875 Last Time Tonight An amazing narrative © the navy and the ports o far-off places COMEDY and NEWS ow mo