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ene ha eee ewe asec e rene COUNTY SCHOOL EXERCISES SET Burleigh Is: Divided Into Six Districts for Teaching Dem- ¥ onstrations Schoo} teaching demonstrations will be given in the six Burleigh county school districts beginning Oc- tober 26, according to Miss Madge noth county superintendent of schoo) The demonstrations will be con- ducted by Miss Sara Guss, former superintendent of schools in Pierce county, and Miss Runey. All teachers in the county will at- tend at least one demonstration. The two demonstrators will also visit schools at random about the county for two days. Miss Guss will demonstrate how teaching should be conducted prop- erly at the six demonstrations, with the teachers being witnesses and auditors. The demonstration program fol- lows: Friday, Oct. 26,9 a.m. At Boyd school, No, 1, Teachers to be pres- ent: Boyd, two; Lincoln, Fort Rice and Manning, one each; Telfer and aa Creek, three each. ‘riday. 1 p.m. At White school, No. 2. Teachers: White, one; Logan and Thelma, one each; Morton and Wildrose, two each. Monday, Oct. 29,9 a.m. At Ly- man school, No. 3. Teachers: Ly- man, three; Trygg, four; Lein and Christiania, three each; Sibley and Clear Lake, two each. Monday, 1 p.m. At Richmond school, No. 1. Teachers: Richmond, three, Phoenix, Highland, Wing, Harriet, Aurora, Lake, Schrunk, two each. Tuesday, Oct. 30,9 a.m. At Eck- lund school, No. 4. Teachers: Eck- lund, six; Ghylin, Grass Lake, Es- therville, Wilson, three each; Painted Woods and Pleasant View, two each. Tuesday, 1 p.m. At Naughton school, No. 3. Teachers: Naughton, Hay Creek, Burnt Creek, Crofte, Cromwell, two each; Frances and Riverview, one each; Glenview, three. Parent-Teachers at Carson Elect Heads Carson, N. D., Oct. 15.—Mrs. W. A. Hart was elected president at a recent meeting of the Carson Par- ent-Teacher association. Other officers elected follow: Mrs. J. A. Hokesvik, secretary, and K. 0. Monson, treasurer. Mrs. Lorenzen, chairman of the county organization, gave a talk on the program. The organization took over thé work of raising the balance. of the money to be paid on the mer- ry-whirl which was sponsored for the Carson school. Salvation Army Is Ready for Auction Florence treme Unetion” which was wheal cast «f 14, was well F received, 4 “special “kitchen utensil” band will appear on the streets shortly before 8 p. m. today, in an effort to draw a large crowd to the s crowd to the sale. ARRESTED MAN ADMITS KILLING 21-Year-Old Youth, Arrested in Havre, Says He Killed Salesman Havre, Mont., Oct. Picked up een Mont., on a char carrying con- cealed weapons, Mescher, 21, told Deputy Sheriff Phil Buckley that he killed L. J. Bohn, Minneapolis typewriter salesman, near Hayward, Wis., October 1. Mescher said when he stopped Bohn on the road near Ladysmith, Wis., and asked for a ride Bohn showed signs of fight, and he killed him. He said he shot Bohn in the breast and left temple, taking the body from the car and ae it be- side the road. He drove Bohn’s car, he said, to St. Paul, went back to Wisconsin, then west to Minot, N. D., and Fort Benton and Havre, Mont., stealing a new car in each place to carry him to his next stop. Buckley saw him on the street at 15.— (®) — at Harlem, Harlem, thought he was carrying a gun, and searched him. The man was carrying two guns and a knife, the deputy said. He was taken to the Harlem jail, where he told the officer his story. He is held there Pepa: word from Wisconsin of- icers. Mandan Army Ready for Harvest Festival Mandan officials of the Salvation Army today are preparing for the | first sale of their annual “harvest festival,” to take place at the Man- dan headquarters tonight. A large quantity of vegetables and a number of chickens will be sold at the meeting, according to Elof An- derson, captain of the Mandan corps. The army workers have been active for the last few weeks, gath- ering the material, he said, and farmers and. city residents in and near Bismarck and Mandan have been most generous. The first meeting of the fall fes- tival was held Saturday night at the army headquarters, when a group from Flasher held a musical pro- gram, with the Rev. Kasper Benson, Flasher, giving the principal address of the evening. Captain A. Bollin- ger, also of thé Flasher organiza- tion, was in charge of the meeting. Bismarck Man Named City Super-Salesman T. E. Flaherty, Bismarck, has been honored by the supersalesmen’s com- The Salvation Army is set for its big auction of vegetables and cloth- ing at the Army hall tonight at 8 o'clock. Funds received from the sale of the vegetables will be used for win- ter poor relief work, according to Ensign Clara J. Sletten. She has been busy the last two weeks gath- ering articles for the sale. One of the biggest crowds in the history of the local corps attended the Harvest Festival services last night, the ensign said. All atanding room was taken The play, SUMMONS State of North Dakota, County of i Fourth Judicial rict. Nels K. Erickson, Plaintiff, vs. Anna Brita Erickson, Helen Peterson, and all other per: unknown claim- ing any interest, tite, claim, lien, or encumbtance in or upon the roperty deseribed in the complaint, Defendants. The State of North Dakota to the above named Defend: You, and each of you, are hereby summoned to answer the complaint of the Plaintiff in the above entitled action, the origin: in the office of the Clerk of the Dis- tlet Court of Burleigh County, North Dakota, and to serve a copy of your r to the said complaint upon the subscribers at their offices in the City of Washburn McLean County, ‘North. Dako’ pla Washburn, Norin Dakota, thip Sth day of October Ms & LINDELL, iecare for Plaintiff, Office and Postoffice Address, Washburn, North Dakota. To the above named Defendants: You will take notice that no per- sonal claim is made agathst the de- fendants in the above entitled action, Drought to determine ad- mittee of the National Traveling Salesmen’s foundation. He has been named the “super- salesman” in Bismarck, and will be a leader here in a $3,000,000 cam- -paign to endow a home, hospital and place of rest and recreation for aged, incapacitated or indigent traveling salesmen at Winston-Salem, N. C. The organization has been consid- ering candiinine for the drive from among more than 500,000 salesmen. The committee making the appoint- ments is headed by John H. Love, treasurer of the Merchants associa- tion of New York. Shippers Organized at Sanish and Van Hook Van Hook, N. Oct. 15.—Or-' ganization of a new farm union ship- ping associaton, whi will cover, the Van Hook and Sanish territory, been announced here. Directors and officers of the as- sociation have been elected, and the groups ex, to begin action at once. Officers are A. H. Lien, pres- ident; Harold Dawson, vice presi- dent; J. L. Shobe, and treasurer, and. Max Wegener, man- ager. Directors are A. H. Lien, Harold Dawson, J. L. Shobe, Peter Eide, A Nissen, Ed. Larson and A. J. Fox. "!Grand Jury to Rest for Month’s Period Without making any Sorther pee lic announcements, the igh ‘county Cy ie which iad ‘een investig: affairs for the two weeks, 5 adjourned after the ate urday afternoon session here and will reconvene Nov. AB seent ing to word released b; ites, interests, liens and er- in the following de- Coun’ North Dakota 7 GNELTANS & LINDELL! L, Attorneys for Plaintiff, ‘Washburn, North Dakota. ‘TOF THE CONDITION OF $66,972.34 $10,000.00 3,000.00 y at Though no nes of the ad- journment at this time is given, it is probable that the court ceased work because of the coming peceral Members of the Methodist co ition welcomed the return of ,, | outl == SUNDAY SCHOOL OPPOSES SMITH Two Hundred Persons Sign Anti-Smith Resolution at Steele Meeting (Special to The Tribune) dred persons were back in their homes today determined to do their utmost to prevent the election of Alfred Smith as president. At a meeting of the Kidder county Sunday school convention here yes-| part in several engagements with pitay a Tors! Sind | the Indians before going to Bis where he worked for years. id from his Gus on the ‘west- C. A. Armstrong, Fargo, state su-| ern frontier, Mr. spent most "the North, Dakota | of his life in the house where. he terday a resolution was offered, and adopted unanimously by the 200 per- sons present, opposing the Demo- cratic standard-bearer. perintendent of the North Dakota Council of Religious Education, was the principal spegker at the meeting. Officers elected for the ensuing year are Mrs. L. R. Schultz, Tappen, president; O. E. Erickson, Tappen, vice president; Mrs, E. M. Stewart, Tuttle, secretary; Mrs. Margaret Grover, Steele, treasurer; Mrs. Harry Alfers, Ee tla secondary su- rintendent; ve W. Gress, tele, educational superintendent. The next convention of the group will be held at Tappen. LIONS CLUBS T0 HAVE CHARTERS Meetings Planned by Clubs at Elgin, Mandan, Glen Ullin and New Salem Lions will roar in jar in three North Da- kota cities in the near future due to the efforts of members of the Bis-| t marck Lions club. At a luncheon meeting in the Lions’ clubrooms today tentative were made for nights” the three places. Lions at Elgin will be presented with their charter Monday night, October 22, ith many of the members of the marck group expected to be in at- tendance. The Mandan club mem- bers have fixed their charter night for November 1, and the Glen Ullin club has planned its first meeting for the first part of next month. No definite date has been set. As principal speaker at the lunch- ai meeting. United States Senator Lynn J. Frazier urged members of the club to go to the polls November 6. In recent years some persons have been elected to public offices by as small a vote as 10 to LS pad cent of the tot-l vote, he decla: Senator Frazier gave a short ad- dress on the workii of the govern-' ment at the United States ca pie describing the various method how bills are introduced and blocked. The method of calling the tenes lines to put over or block partic bills was scored by the senator a his address, For many said, the few progressives “charter | 8W: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. | the Missourl River, division of the Custer Cavalryman 1| Bee in Rochester ‘ A ' | | Dies I PEM osglty to The Tribune) N. Y., Oct. 15.—S} iy'w wtroke'af 20:8 tobe a ing with Battle General Custer’s band at of the Little Big Horn & years ago, Michael J. Clancy today is dead at woe tachment ordered ‘to cut off the In- dians’ escape from the ‘age of 81. position. ie Clancy's company closed in expected ry found Custer and all of his command dead. the position where to capture the Indians After the battle Mr. Clancy took marck, N. D., several was born. RADIO AUDITION PLANNED HERE Last Minute Entry May Cause ‘Local Contest Before State ' Finals Belief that a local radio audition may be held here to precede -the state-wide contest was expressed to- day by Bismarck chairman of the committee arranging the contest. ‘The state audition is scheduled to be held here Thursday and Friday nights, As only.two persons, one girl and one Boe were entered in the contest from Bismarck, no local contest was held, chairman of the local commit- tee said today. A third entry was’ made Saturday, and the possibility ae a local contest may have to be held has arisen. Chairmen from North Dakota have wired the Wash- ington headquarters explaining the iar and today they were iting the decision of that com- mittee. Representatives from 10 North Dakota towns and cities are expected to be’ present at the state audition, according to Mrs. J. P. French, Bis- marck, state chairman of the au- dition, but to date only a few of the entries have been made. She expects the remainder of the persons to en- ter the contest today. ‘Winners of two Fiocal salons have been selected by judges, and winners of eight _— "focal auditions were srrerial to be. decided soon. aol Mildred Kellam and Anthony A. Van Dyke were victors in the Home test held at Jamestown, and Miss Ann Born and Claude Robinson came out first in the contest at Dickinson. Entries. from Devils Lake, Ellendale, Fargo, Mandan and Val- ley City were expected to be received here soon. The state audition goerk will re- ceive medals and go to Chicago as the Atwater Kent foundation's erpetie for semifinals. National fi- nals Sper flere rier of national | Dr. awards will be in New York Decem- senate have done their utmost to| ber 16, prevent the bills from going over only because of the party line pres- sure. The oppereion put mp the small group of progressives also tend- ed to prevent bills entered and backed by the large financial cliques for selfish reasons from being put through the law-making Selena Several members of the Lions club, which was formed a iow days ago under the sponsorship of the Bismarck group, were present at the meeti They were Toste- xia, M. E. Walsh AR) Milton K, Hig- gs, Other visitors were F. J. ackmeau, Nelson A. Mason, eo oy, to Senator Frazi Dr. B. Pardon, Elgin; Frank W. albert, leader of the Lions’ Boy Scout troup of Richholt school district; Arnold Poindexter, Bismarck; C. H. Geise, Minneapolis; Alex McDonald, Bis- mi ogg Oakes; Martin Jacobs, Oakes, ad W. S. Graham, Watford City. Members uf the club were urged to attend the fall conference of the SIX ESCAPE DEATH Minot, Oct. 15—(AP)—J. A. Lions cin at St. Paul Friday and Saturdi The conference will be held at “the St. Paul Hotel, Pe at 9 a. m. Friday and I- ng with the football game between fa! essing and Chicago Satarday, y were also ury aS sys to New Salem tonight, to oe Oe a meeting of vrobable leaders of a Lions club that may be formed there. Two Speeches to End Robinson’s West Tri En Route with Sen Eater. Robinson to Portland, Ore., 5. — (P) — o speeches in today term- | Bee oer Ores lay frm pa Porm that has rick G. Norris to the Mandan |#°0e Republican in national eat gia! 48,226.80 5,745.54 ions. ADVERTISEMENT *s:| MeCoy’s Puts Weight re ‘on Weak Skinny Men in cheek allows Jn the flatness in lancy was a member of the de- rear when Custer believed ‘hat he had “bot- Steele, N.'D., Oct. 15.—Two hun-|tled” the Sioux in an unescapable Line, and five other persons Mkt freight train. The fact that the was traveling slowly is ascribed as ing without serious in; COURT PLAY IS CALLED GREAT Trial of Mary Dt Dugan’. Comes to the Bismarck Auditorium Tuesday George A. Benson, dramatic critic of the Fargo Forum, has the follow- to say about the “Trial of Mary Du- gan,, three-act play which comes ‘tol the the Bismarck auditorium Tuesday: night. “Put ‘The Trial of Mary Dugan’ down immediately as a drama to be geen. “There is no need 8, eM bod play. To do that who will see it tee He yer ret their enjoyment, for the solution of the mystery provides the ‘one and mounting interest. say, however, that Mary ba lovely Follies ‘girl, has esn'e with the murder of her Tich lover, found stabbed to death in her apart- ment. It looks like an open and shut case against her. Everythi points to her guilt. Her life is at stake, and there apparently is nothing her attorney can do for her. But the moment she is lead through the iron cage into the court room, a harried creature in blue, there is grave doubt. But if she did not kill Erice, who did? Before that is answered, the audience is had onward of the wings of’ one of the most fascinating plays I have ever seen in the theater. law- yers in the audience (and they were the methods of attorneys, the man- ner in which law and rules were handled, and procedure, but as dramatic entertainment, they can find no fault. “In those three acts, there is much drama, considerable comedy. The drama is intense, the i, The pathos is real, too; agines and sharpened by ‘exeprt acting, and thus always kept from becoming pathos. Veiller calls the play y, ‘a melodrama of New York life’ It isa (ge gy bta but only insofar as the elements of. life it in themselves melodra- the play is acted by a superb tones ie in Williams County Two veterinarians will be sent from the state veterinarian’s office here to make tuberculin tests in Williams county, it was announced here today. Besides the two veterinarians, who are Be EE i sent there the state, Dr. E. V. r Ee ee el orl rg of fioga engaged int the work. \irty townships have been tested and it is planned to finish testing the remaining 29 townships before Erickson, of Drake, roadmaster on| winter. A THREE DAYS’ COUGH IS i \e) ae, in the car which he was a trie. narrowly escaned death in Saturday evening when their truck by a Soo Line plentiful last night) may criticize |the ROBBER GRABS Who Gets $2,230 in Bag BANK SATCHEL? being responsible for Se nectons infor six escap-| St. ae Stenographer Victim f rig itt mares the county agent as lacgheue Bik States”. Evans Responsible — for Coburn Killing Michigan City, Tnd., Oct, 1°--UP)—. 'D, C. Stephenson, former. grand Higa dk ei St, Paul, Oct. 16.—(P)—Dorothy |A\ her at the Grand hin band yy chy rand eae pa a portly after | Fes lla. ~ oe jhe was on to the bank. ‘Two confederates of the bendit, following in an automobile, up their companion the car grated to a and sped away. The bandit cat momentary con- fusion as he stepped up to the stenographer money satchel Loge but was unable to check man’s attack as he wrested the beg ftom ber as ee ages Kingdon tos stop and into the aw the automobile. JOHNSON SIGNS Sutcliff, sten rd be ir way |i ibbed at the $47; ‘The assertion was made-when Ste: phenson was giving the attorney. {general a eas for use in a suit brought ie the state to oust ag! klan in fe oul lte-farm prisone: Bee court that ‘the shoot had told hi that Coburn must be removed or that he (Evans) would be ruined. WITH SENATORS Washington, Oct, “Oct, 15-—(P)—Wal: ter Johnson, famous ex-pitcher of. the Washington baseball team, American league, signed a three- year contract today ‘as manager of that team. The terms of the con- tract were not made public. ' | John Conmy Greeted on Arrival in Fargo N. D., Oct. 15.—(P)—A deka of officials representing the 40 and 8, the American Legio1 and the city of Fargo, wel home John Conmy, elected na- tional president of the 40 and 8 at bee ion convention in San An- tonio, Mr. ae. was escorted to his home and noon was the honor = ata fine, cope chafnber of commerce, ai ry gion, 40 and 8, and other ‘eficlala Richland Votes on Continuing of Fair Wahpeton, N.D, D., Oct. 15.—Rich- land county voters will vote No. vember 6 on the question of whether or not a county levy will be _con- tinued to support the annual Rich: tt tins to let the voters leciding t the the issue, the county com- Buy a Better N. P. Excursion to Gopher greeny | Game, Oc October 20 marck to Twin Cities, nesote-Chieago, fosttall "| game of the- USREUEUOECOUUULAUUUHUANTUCUUR TEER UU MEENA Remodeling the Victrola Section Hoskins-Meyer Thursday, Friday and Saturday ’ All Victrolas. must be moved to make way-for tear- _ ing out walls of Victrola Department. The much talked _ of Orthophonic Victrola must go at prices that have as- s “~tonished the wholesalers and. will amaze ‘You. iG Boge easy Osos aa All-miust go. Come early. . "The “as ‘ils Saturday night at 10 enak. 10 double faced Victor records given'free with each _maciae . on “Thureday ae Also great One-way daze doesn for zones trip, Bis-| ti the’ Min. game at Tickets on sale trains the week-end in the Twin cule T will burn ab Atlas, Mind of Phil Fox the aan who tat] . Stephenson said Evans | 4 im on several occasions | | It Does Not Clinker PHONE 453 'FOR SERVICE AND CAREFUL DRIVERS ’ Lump 6 Inch $4.10 $3.85 DELIVERED - WASHBURN LIGNITE CO. ‘One Block een Hennepin sad Nicollet ,