The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 10, 1928, Page 3

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5 lilac iy Fargo, N. D., Sept. 10.—Discus- A Pe ANE North Dakota News | IZAAK WALTON LEAGUE MEETS ON WEDNESDAY | 100 Delegates ‘from All Over State to Attend Annual Gathering sions of the Missouri river-Devils Lake diversion project will be held at the annual meeting of the Izaak Wal- ton League members here Wednes- lembers of the League believe the effect on game and fish propaga- tion would ‘ed aie eae if the Project goes throug! ed from each of the 42 chap- ters throughout the state will be made at the meeting. Leaders of the individual chapters are expected to tell what their groups are doing to proj ite fish and game and to promote better ingen t8 Members of estate game and feih commission will hold their meet- ing in conjunction with the league. The board is composed of C. H. Nolt- imier, Valley City, president; R. R. Halstead, Beach, vice-president; M. A. og ag Devils Lake, secretary, and C. P. Peterson, Bisbee, commis- sioner. J. W. Benson and R. A. Kin- zer, of Rolette and Litchville, re- spectively, are chief game wardens of the first and sécond districts. Approximately 100 delegates are expected to attend the state meet- ing. Each chapter is entitled to two delegates at large and one delegate for every 25 members. At present there are 307 members in the Fargo chapter; Bismarck has 63; Grand! Forks 274; Jamestown 25; Mandan| 30 and Valley City 94. The Minot chapter failed to make a report on the membership this year. Officers for the ensuing year will) be elected at the mecting. Judge A. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1928 M. court, -is the president of the state organization and S. W. Devils Lake, is secretary. Christianson, of the supreme Thompson, Big Market Day and Rodeo Will Be Held 3 Days in Grant Co. Carson, Sept. 10.—Plans are being completed for a big three days cele- bration at Carson on September 20, 21 and 22. : It will be comprised of a market day and two days of rodeo with'a street carnival to furnish additional attractions, e Final details for the celebration, which is an annual affair, are as yet incomplete. However, many agri- cultural and livestock exhibits will be received within the next few days, indicating that it will be a success- ful event from every standpoint. Slope Teachers to Meet at Dickinson Dickinson—Dates for the annual convention of the Southwestern Di- vision North Dakota Educational as- sociation to be held in Dickinson this year, have been set for October 11, 12 and 13, according to S. T. May, president of the Dickinson State Nor- mal schoo]. Mr. May is also presi- dent of the educational association. Arrangements are now being com- pleted for the convention, which in addition to several hundred teachers of the southwestern part of the state, is expected to kring many of the lead- ing educators to Dickinson for the three day session. The progrem is being outlined. STATE BRIEFS Dickinson—The First National Bank of Dickinson has purchased the Gardner Hotel, noted New England hostelry. Robert M. Blank, who op- erated it for the past eight years, has been succeeded by Misses Han- hae and Mary Bowers of New Eng- and. Mandan—An__ additional freight train between Mandan and Mott, has been added to that branch line by the Northern Pacific Railway com-| pany. This train will make a daily trip between the two towns. | _, Beach—Bill Swan, a farmer in the ‘Alpha-Golva section, is reported to have threshed 56 bushel of marquis wheat off three acres. The grain ran over 60 pounds to the bushel. This yield is considered as good as any in the state. Steele—The McIntyre building here has been purchased by the Foye Mercantile company. The building, which comprises two store rooms, will be remodeled and the entire first floor will be occupied by the new k owners. Fessenden—A man who gave his name as B. L. McBane and his place | of residence as North Carolina was arrested at the tourist camp by Sher- iff Kunkel when the officer found two revolvers, marked cards and gambling paraphernalia in his pos- session, Arraigned before Judge Jansonius, the man was sentenced to one to three years in the state peni- tentiary at Bismarck. Dickinson—Dr. and Mrs. G. A. Perkins and daughter Miss Mildred, and Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Miklautsch and children are back in Dickinson after extended vacation trips in Eu- rope. The Perkins spent three months in Berlin and Vienna while the Mik- lautsch family visited in Germany, Austria, and Jugo-Slavia, August Profitable Month for Bismarck August proved a profitable month for the City of Bismarck through the office of its judicial agent, Po- lice Magistrate John M. Belk. Fines received by the magistrate for the month totaled $363.90, which the judge terms “a banner month.” Fifteen were arrested and paid} fines for disorderly conduct during the month. Six were arrested for not observing stop signs. Seven paid fines for being drunk. Other offences for which fines were im-| posed by the court were vagrancy, | suspicion, resisting an officer, speed-' ing, traffic violations, and carrying| concealed weapons. , Forty-six cases came before the judge during the period. j THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE HAIL LOSSES © PAID IN FULL Losses During Year Total $3,- 000,000 Department Sum- mary Reveals Although hail losses in North Da- ‘ota were both severe and numerous during the summer of 1927, indemni- ties were paid in full without mak- ing the hail tax levy unduly burden- some, according to the annual report of the state hail insurance depart- ment now being distributed. The report contains data on a summary of the business of the de- partment in 1927 and marks the completion of the ninth year of op- eration of the state hail insurance department. “The year will go down in the his- tory of hail insurance in North Da- kota as a bad hail year,” the report said. “The department received re- Ports of 16,780 claims during the sea- sen as compared with 9,744 during 1926, It is only natural that with ea an increase in the number of cla’ inden: Such was the case. The increase in acreage insured was found to be 25 per cent whereas the increase in losses was about 95 per cent. “The hail department was called on to pay the farmers of the state more than $3,000,000 for hail losses during the year.” The report on the indemnities and the tax levy is based on a compila- tion of figures over a period of nine years, For 1927, the number of loss- es reported was 16,780, with a result- ing indemnity of $3,274,559.93 paid. The figures for 1926 were 9,744 claims and $1,702,065.76; 1925, 8,100 claims and $1,364,458.97 indemnities. The highest amount paid out by the department was in 1924 when 25,667 aan were allowed and $4,489,903.97 paid. The financial condition of the hail department will permit the elimina- tion of the flat state hail tax, the What you want - ++; when you want it! press the button - » there’s your station! fectly. The last technicality of radio is gone. And IHINK of it! Your favorite stations, with- ~ 4 out tuning. Not a glance at the dial, Each station logged mechanically, automatically, for as long as you like. % Press with one finger and you repeat the most careful tuning you ever made. Fifty,a hundred, a thousand times. Marvelous purity and clarity of tone — rich, sonorous volume. Your of five and six can give you whole programs. Per- un; ~ under the following 1581145, Re-issue 17002, Heath 1638- ‘Canada 264391, Gt. Britain 257138, 4, 331166. Also France 607436, Belgium i's and f -ZENI } Quanrud, ee with it the noisy intervals between stations. Tune in by the old method also, if you like. And if you find new favorites, startlingly Q%%154% change the keys to fitthem. A twist or two does it. Without tools, in a jiffy. Hear the “‘Station-a-Secoad” demonstration. Experience the radio sensation of the entire , 1928-1929 season. Nothing so better in radio since | new pleasure today. TH AUTOMATIC WEEK DEMONSTRATIONS OF September, Brink & Reibold, Inc. Wholesale Distributors AUTOMATIC TUNING North Dakota report said. It was decided at prev- ious.meetings that when the surplus in the department should: reach -$4,- 000,000 the flat tax would be elim- inated, and the figures for this year show the amount to be $4,016,611.23, Contention that a reserve fund for future abatements is justified is made in a report of L. E. LaFrance, accountant for the department. The report is contained in the general re- port of the hail department. Kenmare and Beulah Start Movements for Community Pond, Pool Success of New England citizens in obtaining a community lake, swim- ming pool and fish pond all at one time has created movements of the cities, ‘The ~ Commercial . Club. of. Beulah is planning to build. dam across the Knife river at that place and. work on the project should be started in the near future, according to State Engineer R. E. Kennedy, who has designed the dam. The ees lake will give Beu- Igh cater eoy ope hee ried are lacking by providing a for swimming and boating in the city park. The game and fish commis- sion is aiding the project financially and plans to stock the lake with fish when the dam is Sarat A similar proposal is being consid- ered at Kenmare, citizens there plan- ning to construct a dam across the Des Lacs lake. At Kenmare, how- ever, there is an engineering problem which has to do with the flow of wa- ter in the lake. Kennedy is not cer- CLEANING Mrs. T. J. Logan GOLDEN WEST LAUNDRY Mondaa, N. D. Warner Baxter TONIGHT Monday and Tuesday Matinee Every Day at 2:30 Paul Lukas The blazing, dominating personality, Pola Negri, again bursts forth in a new dramatic piece culled from life, hedding a b: master- ant cast of skilled artists. A drama superb in its smash- ing truthfulness, News Pictures . ‘Mi. BIC BOY a (C aZ CF HOT LUCK Safe and Sane Transportation Passenger and Express Air Service Bismarck Licensed Pilot AMPLE INSURANCE. For Reservations or Information, Phone 800 ' HOTEL PRINCE Daily Schedule; Leave Hotel Prince, Bismarck, at 1 p. m. Arrive Leland Parker, Mino’, at 2:30 p. m. Leave Leland Parker, Minot, at.8:30 a. m., Arrive Hotel Prisice, Bismarck, at 10 2. m. See ~ International to Minot Pane hirways, In, same kind in other North Dakotaltain that the flow is sufficient to 4 make a dam effective in meeting the peor eee _PAGE4 urposes which ave in mind, More Suds | Less Soap _ hig wonder pr peeds work time money At All Grocere—25e What the Critics said of Douglas Fairbanks in the “GAUCHO” Douglas Fairbanks has scored once again (Telegraph). A picture which combines the esprit of “Robin Hood” with the lightning speed of “Don Q,” the whimsical ro- mance of “The Thief of Bagdad” with the amazing abil- ity of “The Black Pirate” (Eagle). As an ‘audacious guerrilla of the South American plains, the bouncing star falls ncatly into the best of the Fairbanks traditions (Sun). He is again the picturesque adventurer, daring everything with a confident grin and a romantic deviltry (Journal). Skilfully calculating to win its tribute of laugh, or gasp or tear (Telegraph) it is a good, obvious, robust, high-geared show (World). and races to a hair- raising, typically Fairbanks finale (Mirror). _ “Douglas Fairbanks as The Gaucho” is a great idea carried out in a masterly way (Graphic). Scenes of impressive grand- eur (Graphic) join together breathtaking beauty and thrills (Evening World). And as for Lupe Velez, she'll be heralded as another discovery in the way of. cinema stars (News). A picture of exceptional merit that can- not help but meet success (Mirror). Matinee tomorrow at 2:30 4 Days Starting Tonight, Sept. 10 Performances - 7:15 and 9 p. m. Adults - 50c --- Children - 25¢ Capitol Theatre of |. STOTT B=!QUET users. ite tho Mond” ko Ge pesieg ost Ot aa jen “quick pickup? and washed Fenaeyiania hard coal for “long-burning.”” That gives you. heat comfort—and saves you money. Very liste: ash and no clinkers to trouble you. Your dealer ye See + eee Se

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