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u 1 if The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the, } dally by carrier, per yoar ......-+. ‘rp aily by mall, per year, (in Bismarck) . . also the local news of spontaneous origin published pPAGE FOOR prhe Bismarck Tribune An ludependent Newspapes * THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismerck Tribune « mpany, Bis- aarck, N. D., and entered at the postotfice at Bis- zarck as second class mail matter, ‘eorge D, Mann ...-.........President anc Publisber Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Hb ween 100 ally by mail, per year, | (in state outside Bismarck) ....... » 6.00) daily by mail, sutside of North Dakota ++ 6.90) Weekly by mail, im state, per year . oo Hy 9 3.60) Weekly by mail, 2 etate, three years for . preekly by mail, outside of North Dako year oe erect tesesees oe ber Audit Boreas of Circelation mber of The Associated Yrese sees 1.60) 1se for republication of all news ulspatches credited | +o ft or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and | aerein. All rights of republication of all other mat-| ter herein are also reserved. | ' Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bidg. | CHICAGO DETPOIT | Tower Bidg. Kresge Bide. ————— (Official City. State and County Newspaper) of the gunmen, for protection against thugs. The jlaw, apparently, could not help these men. To be able to conduct their business in peace they have had to jenlist the aid of the underworld. Isn't that a beautiful commentary on the condition of affairs in our second largest city? FATE'S IRONY Fate plays peculiar, freakish pranks sometimes. Rene A. Olsen was an airmail pilot. He had flown many thousands of miles, through all kinds of weath- er, and had done it unhurt. He enjoyed Jife and good health in a supposedly dangerous calling. The other night, off duty in Akron, 0., he and some friends got into an auto to go to Cleveland, 30 miles away, to attend a theater. It was a commonplace enough trip; thousands of people make it daily. But here Fate played her trick. < ‘The auto collided with another car at a cross roads. Olsen was instantly killed. Strange, the way things happen. To escape the dangers of aviation through thousands of miles of flying, only to die in an automobile while driving to a theater—there is a grim irony in it. PROGRESS TOWARD TOLERANCE For all the talk about bigotry and intolerance, this land of ours is making progress. Every so often some little development comes to flash encourage- ment to us. A TIP ON VACATIONS i President Coolidge, in his choice of Brule river for| his summer vacation, expressed a suggestion that | many of us might find benefit in following. i In the remote northern woods, the president will! have opportunity to spend hours all alone, away from| the thousand-and-one annoyances that daily life put) upon him. \ Hf we all could be alone just for a few hours now | and then! Away from people => pall upon us, away | from scenes that have become almost a part of us, | away in a new land and alone. Is there not some- | thing entrancfng in treading new paths, alone? | The petty banalities of our workaday world seem remote then, and the trifling cares vague memories. | Standing before a great tree in the forest or wander- | . ing along with a winding creek, thoughts that are so old that they seem new come crowding into the mind and we are rejuvenated, our spirits are renewed. The society of others, even of those dearest to us, ‘sometimes grows almost intolerable. The sameness ‘of our routine and the people we meet while plodding our rut make us wish for rest, for just a few hours alone. | It is when we are alone with nature that we find) ourselves. From nature’s beauties there is an invita- tion to leisure that is irresistible. It is when we are alone in a new world that we remember some im- portant things that we had all but forgotten, refresh- ing us, telling us who we are, after all, revealing to us the destiny we had all but lost sight of. Here, we are born to a new realization of ourselves. DAWES TAKES A HAND Vice President Charles G. Dawes must have enjoyed 8 deep, sardonic chuckle under his breath the other day. | When Dawes was inaugurated he told the Senate it ought to amend its rules so that a few senators! could not tie Senate business into a knot by filibuster- ing. The senators ignored him and kept their old rules. The other day the Senate, gripped’ by the Boulder Dam filibuster, voted on a resolution to end its woes by adjourning, willy-nilly, within 24 hours. The vote was a tie, and the decision was up to Dawes. He voted “no,” and the Senate went back to extricate itself from its filibuster as best it could. One imagines the vice president thinking: “You | won't abolish unlimited debate, eh? Very well; stew| in your own juices for a while and find your own way out of this jam. I won't help you.” THE SEA SERPENT The old things are always comforting. In this day of constant innovations it is nice to know that our oldest traditions are being maintained. The liner Laconia docked in Boston the other day, and what do you suppose happened? Why, the pas- sengers insisted they had seen a giant sea serpent! Some of them even described it minutely, dwelling on its green eyes and coarse, flowing mane. To be sure, the ship's officers said it was a whale; but the pas- sengers stuck to the serpent story. Every year we get at least one such story from the sea, That is as it should be. From the day the first Phoenician galley ventured out to the great deep be- yond Gibraltar men have been seeing non-existent sea serpents. We would not have this old custom done away with for anything. OUR AMERICAN MAFIA Do you remember the time, a few years ago, when/| we held up our hands in horror at the activities of the Mafia? The Mafia, you recall, was a secret society of Sicily; it was outside the law and more powerful than the law. Sicilian peasants went to the Mafia for protection against robbers, for venegance on their oppressors, for relief from banditry. We read of it and shuddered. ‘Now we can read of Chicago, where the cleaners ‘and dyers have been forced to employ Al Capone, king Dr. Lynn Harold Hough has been pastor of the Central Methodist Church at Detroit. He recently resigned to accept @ pastorate in another city. And the other day, on the eve of his departure, he was called to the campus of Detroit University and given the degree of Doctor of Laws. That is interesting because of the fact that the University of Detroit is a Catholic institution. Presentation of the degree was made by the Very Rev. John P. MeNicholas, a Jesuit. The incident makes good reading. When a Meth- odist pastor can be honored by a Catholic univ ity the land can’t be gripped quite as sharply by religious rivalry as some people have tried to make us think. Editorial Comment “YOU CALL ME CHIEF” (New York Times) There is an unterrified editor in Southeastern Min- nesota who has all the wild freedom of the blizzar His organ is The Hokah C Environed by Insurg- ents, McNary - Haugenit Farme: plunges his snickersnee into all politic: that he dislikes and some that he likes well enough to recommend. For one aspirant to the United States Senate he has “no more use than for the proverbial yellow dog.” One emnient Gopher statesman is de - Laborites, he candidates bed as a “high-hatter, a great big stiff, an ove: puffed- up Norwegian with no special fitne job more than to get the ‘wotes’.” Still, he than the other man. Neither of the Farme: candidate for Governor “is fit to be poundmaster The editor falls like a thousand of brick upon the ju and the unjust. Probably the men whom he swats enjoy the language as much as he does. And so Emporia, Kan., and Hokah, Minn., are sisters under their skin. . THE OPTIMISM OF AGE (St. Paul Dispatch) “The world is better today than it has ever been,” was the theme of an address made by Smith Stimmel, an 85-year old Civil War veteran, at the annual state campfire of the G. A. R., at Jamestown, North Da- kota, Those who declare the world is going to the bow-wows have not seen what he and his aged com- rades have witnessed and the change for the better that has taken place in the life of the people and in the advance of the nation in the short span of a human life. Crabbed old age has been too often pictured as looking backward with regret for the lost glories of the “good old days.” Nothing of the present can equal, in their esteem, that which was the past. Even old age is changing for the better. If it has the habit of reminiscing, it recounts the evil as well as the good of a past time. Here is Smith Stimmel, who knew Abraham Lincoln and the great men of that day and who maintains for the comfort of this generation that this is a better world than it was when men fought and died to save the Union. ‘Those who profess to. see decadence as a part of modern progress lack the backward vision of the Grand Army veteran for a just comparison and a fair assay. LOVE IN ROYAL MATINGS (Prince Christopher of Greece in Saturday Evening Post) I have heard a good deal of comment in America about royal marriages. Usually Americans assume that no royal match has anything to do with love. Sometimes the papers headline “Royal Love Match,” but the wise readers sniff and say: “Oh, that’s just newspaper talk. They put it in to make a pretty ‘ory! Just the same, I’ve known many royal love matche All the marriages in my own family were that. times, of course, even love matches come awft pers, as was the case with the crown princes Saxony, who eloped with the violinist, Toselli; and with my niece, Tieten, whose husband, Carol, crown prince of Rumania, left her. But these are only cases which tend to bear out the truth of the old adage that exceptions prove the rule. At the same time it is true that arranged marriages frequently end in love and happiness. I do not know why. One possible explanation is that "age knows best. Before a marriage between two royal houses is arranged, much time and thought are given to the matter by parents and advisers. And it may be, too, that love is not enough, that marriage built on’ such a glittering foundation is in danger from the begin- ning. The whole theme is one that suffers through too much generalization, BY DAN NEA Ser Hollywood, Cali June 21.—It t how many frocks repose in a girl’s wardrobe, it’s how many cal- ories lurk in her luncheon tl counts in studio village. And if don’t believe that, just ask) y- Molly has as bright a future as any girl in celluloidia. And yet she is hovering on a precipice over- looking obscurity—all because she is inclined to be a bit fat. Molly isn’t the only one in Hollywood who faces the same problem either. Ninety per cent of the girls here live in constant terror of | putting on weight. They diet continually Sp eer, away porated city in it few miles back, Key, Miss Key declares. for the ing apparel, parti days, needs surplus flesh. Molly is in a somewhat more jition than the rest. to | Lai Just as we reelers agai himself to blame. funny. But he is that he thinks he there i body. wired ae draw the ind box i f Indian. 28 ii cod§) five miles from here, is an incor-| the film folk are moving to Beverly | Hills, Westwood or the foothills a| Fashion Note ' Novelty jewelry will be the vogue | this summer, according to Kathleen | Hollywood fashion expert. “Pearls and other stones will be locked in safe deposit vaults and replaced by the chea| ‘ing worn by the girls is the reason new jewelry vogue. lar; jewelry to balance ° predicted column a short time ago, ion is through at First Nation- It is understood that the come- back to ing two- And paving only to know al comedies. He won’t listen to any- As a result, his feature length productions have failed to receipts. He in Carewe is out to fight for Carewe, the folds of + blanket,” says the producer-director, “He is ambi- tious. The screen has never pic- tured the true Indian. Indians are the real American fathers so why should they be misrepresented on the screen? Why not show them as the intelligent, creative personalities self. that they are?” And all of June 21 1783—Armed U. S. troops surround- ed Congress in Philadelphia r novelties,” The scant cloth- of and demanded redress Wear- grievances, forcing Congress icularly on hot to adjourn to Princeton. -sized freak | 1788—New Hampshire ratified the te scarcity.” Constitution, 1892—Grover Cleveland nominated for president by the Demo- cratic convention at Chicago. this Harry in NO SUCH THING Syracuse, June 21.—The jury was not a bunch of gadabouts. But they did work overtime in renderingya de- cision against Mrs. Bessie Stone, whose husband was killed in an auto mishap. So attorney for the plain- tiff protested that the jury was ex- hausted and unable to render a just verdict following deliberation of 24 hours and 35 minutes. “They three square meals and good beds,” said Justice E, I. Edgecomb, in deny- ing the appeal for a new trial. NO SAVVY “Janet_ just took me for a ride.” “Did you enjoy her proximity?” “What d’ye mean—it’s a Chrys- ler.”—Judge, Langdon is truly 80 self-centered knows everything ut =making number of Lay 4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Dear Marye: You know me_ pretty well, daughter, for you realized I would not care for your plan to become a@ mannequin. It has really quite upset me. If you must have a job, I think you could find something more im- portant and more soul-satisfying than parading around all day like a_ peacock, catering to the vanity of women who have nothing to do but spend money—on themselves. isn’t, you understand, that I hing against mannequins, it just seems to me an empty sort of a job, whose only recom- mendation would be that you really had to have work. I don’t want to dictate to you, and you wouldn't let me if I did. But if Alan objects, I wish you would not insist on going into Madame Elise’s shop. I can see how he might think it was quite the wrong environment for you. When you were little, and I had my hands so full of housework, family sewing, and caring for you, I used to think how marvelous it would be to have time—just to have two hours that I could waste with- out feeling things pile up to be done. It never occurred to me that I was fortunate to be kept so occupied. But maybe I was. I expect to have a busy week my- self, making strawberry preserves and finishing my coat. I suppose it seems perfectly natural for you to buy preserves, pastries, and pickles, but I just couldn’t. And I would feel very uncomfort- able if I could not go’ into my own cellar and see a fair supply of canned fruit put up with my own hands, Just as you would have been unhappy as a child, without the cookie jar that I always keep filled even now, All that is part of being an old- fashioned woman, I suppose. And yet there is a sort of peace and {his back, and a | ake-up of a burlesque rube comedian, he pedals an ancient uni- cycle through the crowded traffic of The Good Samaritan TEL ME- WHERE DOES IT FEEL THE |completion about routine household tasks that I should miss. I’m not scolding or moralizing. I | | just want you to be happy. often, i MOM. NEXT: Winning Alan’s consent. o—______________+ | IN NEW YORK oe ‘New York, June 21.—(?)—Scat- tered notes from a Manhattan ramble. . name on the Today with a sandwich sign upon straw hat-linen duster the broadway belt. window, slapping at the hem of a $250 gown, . . . se roped in buggies while “the mam- ma” runs a vegetable stand. . A radio screeching from a push ci King, who once were the Charles- ton champions of somewhere-or- other? . . . . « . «= This town is full of “yesterday heroes.” . . ._ And is continually on the look-out for tomorrow's, . . . . Whereupon the yesterday people must shift for themselves. . . . . The law of clean-up quick is the standard. . . . ‘alter Donald- son, who wrote “Blue Heaven.” . . . «+ « And made enough money to become a partner in a new music firm. . . Nicholas Murray, the “artistical” photographer, who holds the fencing championship and will go to the Olympic games with his foils. . . . That’s the inevitable adjustment of things; the photog- rapher would feign be the fencer and the bridge champion would give all his cups to be able to play golf. . Ih yes, those golf schools that have sprung up in the lifts in and around 42nd street. . . And the |fat papas of the theatre belt, go- ing to “school” in plus fours. . . The rogues’ gallery flavor that at- taches to the taxicab license photos. . . Stock tickers operat- ing in the better class speakeasies. - .. After that recent bull raid the boys needed many “shots” to steady their if-any nerves. . . . Sour faces in the Wall Street belt. o © «© © 6 “Well, Bill, what goes up must come down ° Which reminds me that mechan- TASON, ANDWE'LL TRY yo! QS IT oveR ? Write | M A kitten, loose in a Fifth Avenue | Babies .{t0, themselves as Tommy Nolan and Annie! {awful wallop at the Horatio Alger tales of Wall Street. Time was when the favorite theme concerned the rise of the “Street’s” messenger boys to positions of trust and power. Thousands of _ lads—particularly those from out-of-town—begin their careers as “runners” on the street. But machinery is soon going to put them out of business, I am told. A large number of the errands and message carrying can be done by a ‘ The trick | wire-ticker system that is to be cyclist who, in years agone, saw his jg billings. . . . . adopted in the money belt. se With aviation so wildly in the air, Broadway might have been ex- pected to experience an invasion of the “flying racket.” Just as “movie schools” opened by the dozen when the films were young and innocent, just so is the youthful imagination fired by assurances that one can learn to fly without leaving the ground. Several such rackets refer “wing ground schools” and have been holding their classes in Broadway rehearsal halls. eee They tell of a salesn an of “giggle water” who insisted that he had gen- uine pre-war stuff. A prospective customer demanded a sample and was accommodated. “Omigosh!” cried the taster, as he swallowed down the usual variety of embalming fluid. “I thought you said you had pre-war stuff.” “Well, there’s goin’ to be another war some day, ain’t they?” came back the indignant bootlegger. GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright 1928, NEA Service, Inc) if BARBS | Some Pittsburgh telephone users protested the naming of an exchange “Brandywine” since it suggested liquor. Guess we had better change the name of that battle in our his- tories to the Battle of Lemon Phos- phate or something. ay A New York woman who died left $1 each to her three former hus- bands. Death makes philanthropists of some of us. * * How can one look at the wonder- ful record Babe Ruth is making this year and still think we ought to throw out the Republican adminis- tration? Rois Dispatches say that Hugh Leven ical advances are going to take an /|of Pittsburgh is the world’s greatest —_— | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern «FoR INSTANCE, JASON, AS MY VALET, Do You THINK You COULD STAND “THE “RIALS : AND RIGORS OF AN EXPEDITION: WITH ME,-To MaNGOLIA ANDTHE GOBI DESERT 2 T WANT To EXPLORE TIBET, AND ENTER “THE FORBIDDEN city oF LHASA, BUT “THE LAMAS ARE VERY HOSTILE TOWARD OUTSIDERS, AND~ “* DRAT IT /u Ive RUN MY ARM INSIDE THE SLEEVE LINING AGAIN, —<TAKE THE COAT OFF AH CAN SHO’ Go WITH You THAR, MISTAH MASOR! ~~ WHEN WE COME -To DAT FO'BIDDEN CITY, You DES” Go RIGHT IN, AN’ AH"LL STAY OUTSIDE fue ~4 WHUT IS DEM LAMAS, ww ANIMALS SUMPIA’ LAK A GOAT, ‘oR Is DEY . FOLKS 2. \F DEY \s, AWLE PLAY MA MOUF-ORGAN, AN’ Get "EM ALL DIGGIN, WHILE You Look DE NAH ! = i oo SNL LD ENERGY FROM THE SUN All of our energy comes from the sun, Most of our muscular force comes from the food we eat. This we obtain from plants or from ani- mals which feed upon plants, and plants require the sunshine to grow and to store food material. Only plants have the property of using the radiant energy in such a way that they convert carbon dioxide into carbohydrates, and absorb nitrogen from the soil. Not only the energy in our food comes from the sun, but every force in the world, such as burning coal, exploding gasoline, and electricity, can all be traced to the sun’s forces. The most astounding effect of the sun is its effect on plants. Plants have been experimentally grown one season without sunlight, and even though during the succeeding season they are exposed to the of the sun, most species extinct in four generations. The sun also affects the human body. We have in a slight degree some ability to use the sun’s rays directly in much the same manner that the plant does. A lack of sun- light will produce a lessened num- ber of red corpuscles and a lack’ of coagulation in the blood. A lack of sunlight also causes an increase in the fluid parts of the body and in the white blood cells, producing diseases known as luekemia and anemia. The sun’s rays also aid in our as- similation of calcium and some fatty substances. The treatment of sun- bathing is especially recommended in anemia, tuberculosis, rickets, asthma, catarrh, chronic tonsillitis, nephritis and diabetes. ° One of the handicaps of modern civilization is that we have empha- sized the idea of modesty to such an extent that we wear too much cloth- ing. Consequently, these life-giving rays of the sun are completely shut off from our bodies except on the face and hands. Physicians have at tempted to produce an_ artificial light which can be applied to the nude body. This light ‘Bakers ultra-violet rays, and has been at- tended with some success, but the most satisfactory results come from using the direct sunlight, since there seems to be some unknown energy in the sunlight that is lacking in the chemical ultra-violet rays. When taking a sunbath, either in the nude or at the beach, one should always bear in mind the fact that an overdose of these rays is injurious. Most people have the mistaken be- lief that if a little sunshine is good a great deal will be better. Sunshine is of course very dangerous, as the pores become so swollen and injured by the burn that a proper elimina- tion of poisons from the body can- not take place. Be careful not to be sunburned today because this is the longest day in the year. A small amount of sunburn like- wise affects the body in a, propor- tionate manner. Even the faintest glow on the skin is injurious as long as it lasts. It is therefore much better to measure your sunbath so as tyer of knots. Hollywood. Send the man to s Forty million tourists will travel the roads of the country this sum- mer, according to the American Au- tomobile Association. Such a crowd ought to get results if they’d boy- cott the goods advertised on those glaring billbodMs.. . Citizens’ associations find the crime situation in Chicago not so good despite Big Bill’s ringing as- surances. Sometimes we think that what Chicago needs is a few com- panionate hangings. x * New York producers agree that the girl shows are the best sum- mer attractions. The showmen seldom have a falling out on a limb. ey | At the Movies ———_—________._.__. CAPITOL THEATRE Romantic farce, well screened, with Lois Moran in a dual person- ality role, is the offering at the Capitol Theatre, where “Don’t Marry” a refreshing comedy drama will be shown today Thursday. Primarily it is a story of a mod- ern girl who wants to throw off the shackles of her mid-Victorian-mind- ed aunt, but who, in doing so, falls in love with a puritanical young man, who almost changes her entire viewpoint on life. Miss Moran, cast as. Priscilla Bowen, gives an excellent perform- ance in the dual role of a Happer who turns old-fashioned to win her man, and who then has to revert to tne to hold him. Miss Moran not only handles the humorous situa. tions with finesse and understand- ing, but brings ‘to the screen two entirely different personalities that hold the interest of her fans throughout the picture. i The entire production registers 100 per cent in entertainment value from the first reel to the last. ELTINGE THEATRE They offered him $5,000 a month if he would leave them alone. The girl he was mad about offered him her love if he would throw away his detective lieutenant’s badge, turn against society, and join with the underworld crooks. It was wealth and the love he wanted more anything else against honor. George Bancroft, as detective Lieutenant Two-Gun Nolan, has that decision to make in “The Drag Net,” coming to the Filings for Friday and Saturday, The choice he makes and the terrific he encoun: ters in adhering to his decision ai pictured in thrilling fashion in this pulse quickening melodrama of the eternal battle the man of the law wages against the crooks of underworld. George Bancroft, the star, will be remembered as “Bill Weed” of “Un- derworld”, He is not the only mem- ber of “The Drag Net” cast who pazed in “Underworld,” however. velyn Brent was the leading wo- man in that jcture and she is th irl of “The Drag Net”, Fred Koh- ler was a gang leader in “Under- world” and Has a similar role in this os to produce an increasing tan each time over several exposures than to Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health care of the e. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. try to become tanned through th effects of only one or two sunburns, The tanning of the skin, or the sunburn, cannot in themselves be beneficial. The only helpful thit about a sunbath is the absorption ot the ultra-violet rays by the bI The skin becomes tanned only be- cause the body is trying to protect itself against too much sunlight to which it has not been accustomed. The darkening of the skin therefore acts as a protection “against the ultra-violet rays so that the time of each exposure must be increased day by a in order to daily get the same enefit. GUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: H. J. L. asks: “With what diseases does one lose flesh and strength?” Answer: Tuberculosis, cancer, and most of the deficiency diseases, ag scurvy, rickets, etc. v Question: Reader asks: “Will you please suggest a diet that would be suitable for a person who is go- ing to business everyday?” Answer: The foods named in the menus which appear in this column each week can be secured in any ordinary restaurant if you are not \living at home. I purposely make these weekly menus so liberal that there will be no difficulty in your being able to get your choice the foods I prescribe. Question: Mrs. O. J. writes: “No matter how much work I do, I do not seem able to perspire. Also, I suf- fer a great deal from rheumatism.” Answer: Those who have any kind of rheumatism always have difficulty in perspiring. I believe this is due to the rheumatic toxemia which seems to poison the body to such an extent that the pores of the skin do not open freely. If you will get rid of your rheumatic poisons through dieting and increasing the health of your skin by frequent bathing, you will soon find that oad jwill begin to perspire freely. When copious sweating finally starts, it is a sure sign that you have reduced your rheumatic diathesis and you will be well on the road to recovery. Question: S. G. asks: “Would you suggest the orange fast for a growth on the spine under the in- testines?” : Answer: An orangejuice fast is always indicated in the treatment of any abnormal growth where an operation is not advisable. If the growth is not cut out, it must be absorbed and eliminated through the blood stream. Fasting relieves the body of the burden of assimilation and the building of tissues, and gives the body forces more chance to elimi- nate toxins or any abnormal growths. oo | Incorporations i oR STARS a eR Incorporations: Minot __ Brick and Tile company, $25,000; William G. Riebe and Bert Carr, Minot anc John A. Verzatt, Burlington. Union Brokerage company, Portal $10,000; C. T. Holmes and H. J Kramer, Portal, and M. 0. Burck and C. M. Anderson, St. Paul. Peterson-Schroeder Co., Souris $25,000; John and Arthur Peterson jand Henry Schroeder. Tri-City | Motor Transportatior company, Fargo, $25,000; Frank L. Kuhlmeyer, R. F. Gunkelman anc E. J. Schonberg. Glen Ullin Gas company, to supply gas for Glen Ullin, $25,000; Michael Tschida and M. J. Tschida, Glen Ullin, and L. A. Tavis, Mandan. Dickinson Stores, Inc., New Rock- ford, $25,000; E. E. Dickinson, A. S. Dickinson and B. E. Dickinson, New Rockford; T. L. Dickinson and P. A, Dickinega. Beach, ‘inton Creamery company, Lin- ton, $15,000; E. R. Schultz and H. J. Fernholz, Linton; A. C. Schultz, F. J. Fernholz and Fernholz, Arcadia, Wisconsin. : irda Tractor company, Dickin- son, $10,000; Frank Sylvia and Or. ville Burd: Associated Investors, Inc,, Bis- marck, $25,000; F. E. Hedden, A. E. Brink, R. B. Webb, P. A. Wachter, C. J. Lynch, E. W. Leonard, W. E. mal Cole, M. H. Atkinson, E. Gordon Cox. ens th B Ce aa ——___—. a DIDNT Laer LONG lumbus, -» June 21.—So months ago James Nichols, 84, a Civil War veteran, _ ma: Mary Nichols, 64. After the hone; they settled down to the proverbial “happy ever after”. But Nichols has nom ied fat for divorce, claim- of and infirm. on a Admission to now eight ecnts Sundays.” the Roman z00 is on “popular priced picture. William Powell takes the You don’t have to break » swith an aviator to miss‘ fie,“