The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 11, 1928, Page 10

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+ iv — Arrival of “* South Bound Soo Line Train Being Sought Prospects are bright for having! @he Soo line railroad change the of arrival of its passenger | v from the north, which arrives » Bismarck in the evening, it was oo Med offices of the state "Commissioner €. W. McDonnell Waid the matter of time change has Deen presented to the Soo line man- bard with a request that the) of the train’s arrival be moved | Until, the Northern Pacific! ‘ the time of its eastbound | in passing through Bismarck in, he evening, mail and passengers | ym the north had 15 minutes to c ¢ Make.a connection here. Now, how- } ever, the branch line train arrives &fter the eastbound train hes left. “The result is that mail for the | Cities is delayed just 2! 2° McDonnell said. “It is held| 12 hours and then it arrives; Twin Cities in the evening so 12 hours more before it can be | ri It will be a real public] for the railroads to restore | this connection.” = Information from Son Line of-| icials is that they are planning a} Qhange in the system of handling | express and freight shipments at/ Es trai and Drake so as to permit} in for Bismarck to leave the! Sd point at Drake earlier in day. Farmer Near Willa | Has Queer Accident) Mott, N. D., May 11.—(Special to the Tribune).—A very peculiar acci- @ent happened near Willa, N. D., few days ago which might have Gulted fatally. Fred Nikos, Sr., 50, thistles with a horse rak: ing them in bunches. W freshened and drove the fire tow @ stubble field with a nice growt ef winter rye in it. In an endeavor to. save the rye from damage, Mr.| Niklos drove the rake ahead of the fire to try and head it off. * The fire traveled so taught in the thistl afd the horses bec end kicked and lunged. Mr. Nikl ‘was thrown in front of the ra among the burning thistles and in ing to save himself lost one of | jhe lines. | * He was dragged for some dis-| €ance in a circle and rolled over) a over in the burning hay, but| iy managed to extricate him- self. By rolling over and over he gatinguished most of the fire in his| elothing. His daughter arrived and | helped could not reach. ; Asa result he was badly burned ‘about the ears, nose and hands but is able to be around again. High Court Upholds Cavalier Co. Verdict Persons wishing to attack the| regularity. of the incorporation of @ village must do so directly and not ina roundabout way, the supreme has held in a case appealed ym Cavalier county. tt ee MM RN OME hl fast les in the rake, | ame frightened | and Storlie school district to the organization of special school district follow- » the incorporation of the village yg The plaintiffs contended the territory incorporation of village was invalid. Some terri- was cut off at the adjoining @ehool district when the special Willage school district was organized. \“2 The supreme court held that the tion was not invalid by of the fact that the county jioners, in declaring the re- of the election on the question ef incorporation, misdescribed the to be included within the limits. It was further held canvassing the returns of | village elections the county |“ joners have no power to al- the boundaries of the village. decision affirms one previously lier county district ELTINGE THEATRE Old Kentucky,” famous race track play by Chas. has been brought up to date » costume and setting and| be on the screen at the Eltinge and Saturday. James lene Costello and Wesley ‘are featured players. Wesley remembered as the popular, faced juvenile of several ke year, during the Kentucky scenes were phot hill Downs, Lou’ and Latonia, Lexington. ‘famous Blue Farms just outside racing colt was filmed. showing p the horses are cared for and 1 Matt Wynn, Danny O’Sul Canard: ‘and John E. Madden, noted owners, cooperated with ‘studio in obtaining these details, | did Mose Chapoff, the famous horse trainer who appears in Previous winners at Downs were also photo- for the production. CAPITOL THEATRE .. Motion picture followers all over -eountry are welcoming the re- carn of the ever-popular star, Re; Denny, to the role of a boxer Fecent Universal picture, “On Toes.” enthusiasm ‘al died down although been released for i . in fact. ! actually had to learn to pilot a plane even rumored that he is part|herself for her last picture . . . and owner of the restaurant... it|Sue is no slouch as a pilot... . must seem good to € lie to be able | Workmen busy tearing down the old to go whe! \e es without be-| Mack Sennett studio... in a few ing trailed by inquisitive newspaper more weeks Hollywood's _ oldest reporte » for years he ! studio will be nothing but a memory couldn't step outside his home or}... while those who knew every | studio without dodging the re-|unpainted board in it will try to be \the 3 r to extinguish fire on his back }- lout whine of a siren... and Sally|he hasn’t made a good picture or a Eilers is tr: © convince the cop | box office success since “The Strong that he shouldn't give her a ticket |Man.” Unless his present produc- »In the case at bar, Billings school | At the complete life of ly, E. R. Brad- | Th ‘over Denny’s portrayals of in the “Leather Pushers” THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE After impersonating a quarreling married couple over Station KOIL at Council Bluffs, lowa, for two yeare, Edna Margaret Hanson and Harold J. Marshall now are married ane they say real life ie the opposite cf radio life. In Hol 7 Arthur Lake driving a new car ... he has shot upward like a rocket during the last few months . «and has only Lady Luck to thank. . . . Sue Carol heading to- ward an aviation field ... she 11—| Charlie +s he in this place congregates funny in a new and modern film factory... . Even in Moviana there is progress. d being driven to her expensive sedan . . + prompted her to take t the picture racket son taking her two an's Chinese | ie Chaplin isn’t working, G tite a bit of time with ers... . There go Gil- d and Norma Talmadge hy p talking about the way they run around together . . just keep it up long enough and everyone loses interest... it is taken as a matter of course... . A green coupe going pretty fast 2 speed cop... a long drawn! studio in wonder wh When Monta Bell started direct- ing “The Bellamy Trial,” he re- cruted a flock of real live newspaper men to act as the reporters in the courtroom scenes so that critics couldn’t condemn his reporters for not loking like reporters. And then he turned right around and made them do things that no self-respect- ing newspaper man of this day would even think of doing. e theater to now that st is spending Harry Langdon was telling me the other day that his current film, as yet untitled, will be the best one he has ever made. Let’s hope so as | this time ... she won't drive thatjtion “clicks,” the comedian in all fast again . or not much faster | probability will be through at First . The ol arles Ray studio! National—and a new release will be desolate and deserted .. . it would | difficult to find. It’s really a shame make a great ..+ The usual|to see a comedian of Langdon’s abil- crowd gathered outside the Mont-|Jity slip the way he's _ slipping. |martre to watch the stars come and|Harry’s chief trouble is that he |go. d Clara Bow giving them; wants to be star, director, writer and gag man. And he won't listen to criticism from his staff, some of whom realize his predicament and could pull him out of it. a real treat she seems to be as opular with women as with men . no girl could pass a more severe test. ..6 Ways and Means Head Once College President: sition and make himself heard in any verbal fight. The chairman designate has been a member of the house for a score of years. During virtually all that time he has been a member of the ways and means committee. Washington, May 11—@)—A touch of the old school classroom and its pedagogic rule may be in- jected into proceedings of the ways and means com of the house under the regime of Representative Willis C. ley of Oregon, new chairman Gy (Statement for Publication) 'TREASURER'S DEPOSITORY REPORT Published in Compliance with Sec- tion 15, Chapter 199, of the Laws of 1923, regarding deposits of all Public Funds, Name of Bank Bank of North Dakota. Description of Deposit Checking account, $1,727.19 at 1% per cent. interest. Time deposits, $1,500 at 3 per cent interest. 1, A. ft. Falconer, treasurer of Lin- chool District No, 38, Burleigh | | succeed who is n congress to a federal , Hawley may find the oom” a little more those he presided over University at Salem, to coln Walker Whiteside Bringing Cast of Rare Excellence Walker Whiteside has been an- nounced by the management of the city auditoriur in Bismarck for one presentation, Monday night, May 14, of the ultra-thodern play of Japanese life, love and _ pas- sion, “Sakura,” (The Wild Cherry Blossom), in which the star will ap- pear as the powerful Prince Hagane, an illustrious personeve in Nip- ponese statesmanship, A passionate love story makes “Sakura” a play of enormously ap- pealing interest, for it concerns the jealous affection felt by two great men for pretty little Onda Sada, an Americanized Japanese maiden. The rivalry for her affections involves Prince Hagan: and dashing young Alexei Ivanov, of the Russian Em- bassy, who has followed the “Wild Cherry Blossom” from the United States to Japan, in the hope of win- ning her hand in marriage. The flaming passion of the love story rises to fiery heights in the second act, in which the two men confront each other in the sacred precincts of Onda Sada’s private boudoir. The very end of the play pulsates with intensity and sustains intercst until the final curtain. Walker Whiteside has cast “Sakura” with rare excellence, and in the important roles will be found Miss Franc Hale, as Onda Sada, Miss Helen Hardison, Miss Esther Belle, Paul McGrath, Frank Hender- son, Richard Ranier, Maurice Kuhl- mann, M. Rale and Wm. Dunne. Superb scenes and costumes will make “Sakura” a play long to be re- membered in the matter of stage embellishment. Mott Plans Large Building Program Mott, N. D., May 11.—(@?)—Busi- ness conditions in this area are very good this year, with ample local capital to finance an extensive building program, according to F. G. Orr, secretary of the Mott com- mercial club. ‘Approximately $100,000 will be spent by private concerns for build- ing this year, Orr said, with a $100,000 program planned by the city government for new water- works and sewer systems. _Con- tracts for the city projects will be let May 15. “A new bri by the Fietsam Hardware company, Mott, which will cost $8,000,” Mr. Orr said. “Besides this, two resi- dences will be erected at a cost of $15,000. Considerable building | is planned on farms in this locality. Expenditures for building here in 1927 totaled about $75,000.” on ‘The oldest tree in the world is believed to be in Ceylon; it is now in its twenty-second century. SAME PRICE for over 35 Years BAKING POWDER K' use less than of higher priced brands MILLIONS of POUNDS USED BY THE GOVERNMENT lent of that insti- tution. ‘As a stalwart in the ranks of| house republicans he will find his most difficult job in keeping the democrats under control, as the ways and means committee with its power to initiate tax and tariff leg- islation is one of the big policy- |making committees in congress, |and for that reason probably more political rows are stirred up at its mectings than in any other of the bat hundred committees on Capitol | Hill. But Hawley, whose father and mother were among the first pio- \ncers to travel the old Oregon trail, is accustomed to and unafraid of; political skirmishes and, if things become too boisterous, he has one of the deepest and most melodious of voices that can drown out oppo- Coun tify tha correct statement of deposits for pe- riod ending May 10th, 1928. A. R, FALCONER, Treasurer. CAPITAL COMMERCIAL COLLEGE Eppinger Bldg. Phone 121 Bismarck, N. Dak. A REAL OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL Our SUMMER TERM for high school graduates, teachers, col- see and university students will begin Monday, June 4, but students may enter at any time. Our former students ere now successful Commercial Teach- ers, Court Reporters, Private Secretaries, Cashiers, - graphers, Office A: sistants, Accountants, Bookkeepers. Our training gives them a real life profes- sion. Come to Bismarck where the salaries are higher. All the State Offices are here. Our students are employed in all of them, from the Supreme Court to the Bank of North Dakota. pad State, bays ibaa, aes: new location in in- ger Buleting. 314 1-2 Main Avenue, will give us ample room for three hundred stu- dents annually. Special ar- $1450 round trip mRCpe For as little as, = rangements for heating, light- The AnD pular-price way, ing, ventilation, etc., vail ie mid-clase pe tay our 15 it one of the most pleasant srest liners. g2dare open schools in the state. Every- sea, by easy> thing bright, new, and clean. Es COMMERCIAL COURSE ers permanent osition: good opportunities vor i: Collegiate Tour » « « $38: paid 32 days. vancement, 38 Want to know about it? Phoas month in the year, qualifies: of stop in today. aon epee for every state in the Union. No other trai offers all of these Bnd made over TEN THOUSAND made D DOLLARS as a result of tak- ing our course. ‘We offer reasonable rates for tuition, intensive instruction, the best itions obtainable. Write us for information. “PROF.” R. E. JACK Apply to Local Steamship Agents or Canadian Pacific, 611 Second Ave., South, Minneapolis, Minn. Gaadian = Pacific North Dakota, do hereby cer- the foregoing is a true and Kellogg’s — prefer them CORN F ick building is placed are not only America’s favorite breakfast cereal—but their flavor and delightful crispness is famous the world over. 11,000,000 people enjoy them BY LEONARD HALL New York, May 11.—One of the perpetual joys of the theater is the fact that we never know just when or where the lightning of satisfac- tion is going to strike. With the coming of May the New York show shops are staggering through the late-season doldrums. The big league producers, their work over for the year, have sailed away to the old world in search of plays and players, and Times “Square's playhouses are turned over to ambi- tious young managers with a mar.:- script, a shoe string and a prayer. With all due respect for the am- bition and zeal of these independent producers, when they finish they customarily have nothing left but the prayer. They seem to have limitless faith in faint, incoherent, limping plays that die almost as soon as born. Naturally enough, these dramatic cripples that come so pitifully and hopefully along at the fag end of the theatrical year are depressing. First nighters who have borne nobly with a long and busy season begin to show distinct signs of mental and jspiritual collapse. Their eyes take on an unhealthy glitter, and their reading is confined almost entirely to time tables and steamer lists. It is the hour for escape. Then, in the midst of all this de- pression, comes a touch of beauty and the ring of truth, and often in the strangest places! We encountered it after march- ing glumly into the heart of Green- wich Village and to the tiny Cherry Lane theatre, fully expecting the NEW YORK STAGE LETTER Greenwich Village Produces Russian Hit as the New York Stage Season Frays Out worst. But the lightning of satis- faction struck, with a crackle and a roar. We found as brilliant a group of youngsters as were ever gathered | on one party , latform, intelligently | and passionately playing a tragic and finely-turned play called “The Waltz of the Dogs” by the late Andreyev. Out of nowhere these fine young actors had miraculously appeared, and were playing Russian tragedy with the assurance of veterans, plus | the dash and charm of youth. We didn’t know their beginnings —dazed but happy in the trenches, we only realized that we were sce- ing some unusually fine work by youngsters who Knew their _busi- ness and were touched with the holy fire of beautv and truth. Isn’t that the answer to adven- Iture and charm of the theater? ‘Suddenly, and with no warning, a} ‘first rate performance of a sound | play comes leaping out, at us and | yelling “Surprise!” We never) know when it’s going to happen, or where, but it always does, soon or late. | It is such little miracles that | keep burning our love for the} theater, no matter how often it may let us down. For in the playhouse twe may be down, occasionally, but | | we're never quite out. TO OPEN BIDS MAY 17 Bids on a water soft to be installed at the for the insane, Jamesto opened by the board of adminis j tion May 17. An appropriation | | that are hosen from hundreds of different coffees ........ these flavors Gambie-Robinson Fruit Company, and Associate Houses mingled Corn Flakes % More than —every day. * waxtite inner-sealed wrapper pro- tects their wonderful flavor and crispness. Enjoy them for lunch, dinner or breakfast. fruits or honey added. A treat for the kiddies’ evening meal. LAKES dining-cars. Sold by all grocers. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. $18,000 is a’ construction 0! ane Kellogg's are famous for “‘oven- freshness”! The patented With milk or cream— Order at hotels, restaurants. On lable to finance the} The religious order, the Society f the softening plant| of Jesus, the members of which are called Jesuits, was founded by Ignae tius Loyola in 1534, 1 sewage disposal system, it was 'd at the board offices, ERE'S a luxurious hat for spring wear. Soft, smooth and smart. Styles and colorings meet any young man’s fancy. Stop at your Lanpher dealer's today. Popularly priced at five to ten dollars DAHL CLOTHING STORE 47 Years in Bismarek IS famous fuel gives high compression power to any engine—old or new. It made pos= sible the new high compression motor! It means less gear-shifting flexible, mere no knocks—a more powerful motor. Fleet! Smooth! Silent! Your ear glides along like the wind itself = when Red Crown :Ethyl is in the tank! : The response of a car fueled with Red Crown Ethyl is amazing. It gets away on the instant! Quick as a flash it picks up speed! Seems to drink in the road—by miles on the open highway—by inches on crowded streets—-always with ease and quiet power. It will cost you very little more to ride—with Red Crown Ethyl= smooth, untroubled miles! : At Any Standard Oil Service Station and at Most Garages Standard Oil Company - BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA

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