Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ay A@ be THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1928 OCTOBER BABES TREBLE DEATHS Fifty-three Children Born in Rismarck During Month; 18 Succumb Births outnumbered deaths almost three to one in Bismarck during October, according to the records of the city auditor. . Fifty-three children were born in the city during the month while only 18 deaths were reported. Twenty-eight of the children born during October are boys. BIRTHS Oct, 1—Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Craig, city, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hegel, Mandan, a son. t. 3—Mr. and Mrs. William Schantz, city, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Hull, Driscoll, a son. Oct. 4—Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Schultz, city, a son; Mr. and Mrs. William Abers, Hazen, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Thorman G. Berg, Fargo, a son. Oct. 5—Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Hein- ert, Solen, a gon; Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Maddox, city, a daughter. Oct. 6—Mr. and MrseJames Black, Ft, Lincoln, a son, Oct. 7—Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Scardaccione, State Island, N. Y., a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Samuel G. Meske, eh a daughter. Oct. 8—Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Mit- ‘eider, Tappen, a son. Oct. 9—Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kautzman, Flasher, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Lester White, Dawson, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Julius Edwin Meyer, Baldwin, a daughter. Oct. 10—Mr. and Mrs. Rolf K. Harmsen, city, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hage, city, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Alva B. Carley, city, a daughter. Oct. 1i—Mr. and Mrs. John A. Rath, city, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Mark Puriteen, Temvik, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Bennie L. Koon, city, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Erickson, Bet lah, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Enock Otnes, Hazen, a son. Oct. 13—Mr. and Mrs. Harold Welch, city, a son. Oct. 14—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wetch, Solen, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Remer, Linton, a daughter. Oct. 15—Mr. and Mrs. Harry J. Johnston, city, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dohn, city, a daughter. Oct. 16—Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Regan, Negaune, Mich., a son; Mr. and Mrs. John Lang, Medina, a son; Mr. and Mrs. John Roether, city, a daughter. Oct. 17—Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Holt- ing, Burnstad, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. William C. Hanewald, city, a son. Oct. 18—Mr. and Mrs. Elmer S, Schroeder, Mandan, a son; Mr. and Mrs, Freeman E. Geers, Brisbane, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Chester Boyd, Menoken, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs, John J. Scher, Jr. city, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Tol- chinsky, city, a daughter. Oct. 19—Mr. and Mrs. Geo. F, Bur- bage, city, a daughter. ct. 20—Mr. and Mrs, John Mil- denberger, city, a son; Mr. and Mrs, Ralph ‘Walt; --Zanesvilles: Ohio, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Pinks, city, a son. Oct. 21—Mr. and Mrs. Chelsea J. |) Knapp, Jamestown, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Paul V. Kurta, Hazelton, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs, Paul C. Rol- shaven, city, a son. Oct. 22—Mr. and Mrs. George Haugen, Driscoll, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Zimmer, city, a daughter. Oct, 23—Mr. and Mrs, Harold Al- derin, Fort Clark, a daughter. Oct. 24—Mr. and Mrs. John Win- tergerter, city, a daughter. Oct. 25—Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dwor- sky, Iron Mountain, Mich, a daughter. Oct, 26—Mr. end Mrs. Arthur L. Tees, Wing, a son, ee Oct, 27—Mr. wud Mrs. Leonard J. Myers, city, a son. Oct, 28.—Mr. and Mrs. Abel John- son, @ son. DEATHS Oct. 1—Thelma Skarstad, 3, Na- poleon. Oct. 6—John Durand, 42, New Jersey; Anton Lars Hanson, 60, Steele; Mike Schlosser, 20, Bismarck. Oct. 7—Mrs. Tobine Emelia Chris- tianson, 42, Almont. . ‘ Oct. 8—Lena Kupp, 40, Richard- on, Oct. 9—Arnold C. Hayes, infant, Garrison. Oct, 10—Mrs. Frank Vosika, 54, jandan. Oct. 11.—Mrs. Nellie N. Blunt, 62, Bismarck, Oct. 14—Mrs. Mary Louise Mc- Lean, 71, Bismarck. 2 Oct. 15.—Mrs. Charlotte Sword- strom, 59, Hurdsfield. Oct, 16—Allis Ward, 83, Bismarck; Michael Henry Noland, 91, Beulah. Bee 17—Elizabeth Wesch, 17, Fort ice. Oct. 19.—George W. Thamert, 30, La Moure. Oct, 28—Oliver Webb, 28, Bis- marck, Oct. 23—Esther Levings, 27, El- bowoods. Oct. 830—Willi: i 5, Fargo. Mountrail Planning Poultry Exposition Stanley, N. D.,. Nov. 22.—Plans are going forward rapidly for the sixth annual Mountrail county poul- try show, and indications are tae entry list will be the largest in re- cent years, Dates of the show have not been definitely set. The show this year will be held in the local high school auditorium to care for more persons than was pos- sible last Pico Tags, ribbons, score cards and award cards have been ordered and will be delivered soon, according to C. O. Ebling, Mountrail county ex- tension agent. —————_—_———————e Finds a Way to - Stop Attacks of Fits . Reports are received of an amaz- ing treatment that has proved reach all those who have not heen helped and to do so is making the | startling offer of a treat- ment free to all sutferers. Anyone | afflicted should write for this tet | treatment at once.—Adv, The new six-cylinder Chevrolet sedan and a close-up of the motor, showing some of the improvements. Flint, Mich, Nov. 22.—(NEA)— At practically the same price as the four-cylinder automobile it replaces, the new six-cylinder upon the public. A list of the innovations’ intro- duced with this model, which ill be ready for distribution January 1, runs the gamut of practically all the improvements to be found on the higher-priced automobiles. Such, for instance, are: A high compression motor, smaller bore and stroke for higher power, | { Chevrolet | springs many additional surprises | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Newest in the Six-Cylinder Family | four exhaust and three intake ports, a fuel pump instead of the conven- tional vacuum tank, an accelerating pump at the carburetor to feed extra fuel into the manifold when the throttle is depressed suddenly, high- er gear ratio, fixed focus depressible beam headlights, adjustable driver's seat, and solid steering shaft. In addition to these features, re- markable in a small, low-priced car, there are such novelties as a new type camshaft, a heavier crankshaft, grouped dash instruments, spark and THANKSGIVING DATE UNSETTLED UNTIL 1886, LIBRARY STUDY SHOWS George Washington Proclaimed First Official Celebration in 1789 Washington, Nov. 22.—(AP)— Not all Thanksgivings have fallen on Thursday, as many have sup- posed, and the first one was not nated by Governor Bradford in Records at the library of con- gress concerning the big day of Pumpkin pies and turkeys reveal enlightening facts concerning the origin and erratic leaping about the calendar of this old holiday which is popularly supposed to have been as stable as the sun. Its origin can literatly be traced to the Land of Canaan for in the bogk of Judges is told of the harvest {celebration in “the house of God,” and this later appeared among the Hebrews as the “Feast of Taber- nacles.” Pilgrims Observe Day After the Pilgrims came to Amer- FIXED FOCUS, DEPRESSIBLE BEAM HEADLIGHTS: throttle levers on the dash instead of the steering column, only the horn button’ at the steering wheel, long | chrcme-vanadium steel springs, 20) by 4.50 tires, chromium-plated radi- ator, motor meter on the dash, and a headlight control switch at the driver's left foot. The price range for the new Chev- rolet passenger car is from $525 to $725, at Flint, Mic! hile that for the old four-cylinder car was from $495 to $715. The new sedan, how- ever, is to be sold at the same price as the old—$675. thanksgiving and rejoicing for their | first harvest which had yielded well. | In October, 1621, Governor Bradford | ordered a three-day feast and cele- bration to which Chief Mas: it | and other Indian friends were in- | vited. Many believe this to be the | first Thanksgiving from which the modern celebration dates but the records at the library of congress do not show that there was any special religious service during the period of feastng. The first Thanksgiving day after the United States became a nation was Thursday, November 26, 1789, and was proclaimed by George Washington. The next Thanksgiv- ing day was Thursday, February 19, over three years “until President John: Adams in 1789 decidec to ap- point Wednesday, May 9, as the time for national Thanksgiving. Observed In Spring May must have been a little too warm for turkey and pie, for the next year President Adame set April 25. President Madison proclaimed a Thanksgiving day ir each of the four years he was in office, and he was a consistent Thursday man, but selected a different month for each one: the third Thursday in August, 1812, the second Thursday in Sep- tember, 1813, Thursday, January 12, 1814, and the second Thursday in April, 1815. No more Thanksgiving proclama- tions were issued for 47 years. Then, April 10, 1862, after “signal victor- ies,” President Lincoln recom- mended to the people of the United States that thanks be given at their next weekly assemblage. in their accustomed place of public worship. President Lincoln also proclaimed Thanksgiving days for Thursday, August 6, .863, the last Thursday of November, 1863, and the last Thursday of November, 1864. Regularity Starts in 1870. The holiday really began to jog along in an established order in 1866 when President Johnson began naming the last Thursday of Novem- ber for that and the succeeding years he was in office. Beginning with the proclamation of 1870, that date became generally accepted as the official Thanksgiving. Two days were set apart in 1876, the cen- tennial year, July 4 and November giving, April 30, 1889, the day marking the 100th anniversary of the inauguration of George Wash- ington, HOW'S THAT? Chester, Pa.—And after Wardell Smith, a negro serving a life sen- tence in the Eastern Penitentiary, gets through with shis present sen- tence, he’ll still have four more years to serve. He was sentenced to the four years “after life” sen- tence by Judge Fronefield upon a charge of aggravated assault and battery with intent to ki wy: RTISE: Who Is Your Skinny Friend, Ethel? Tell him to take McCoy’s Tablets for a few weeks and get enough good healthy flesh on his bones to 30. There was also anextra Thanks- |= Fi e-Year-Old Boy Loses Big Fortune by Judge’s Ruling Detroit, Nov. 22.— (AP) — Five- year-old Dode Alfred Boyer today was legally disinherited from shar- ing the benefits of $8,500,000 trust fund created by Joseph A. Boyer, multimillionaire eae machine manufacturer, for the child, in the belief that he was a grandson. In a decision in suits to disinherit the child on the grounds that he had been falsely represented by Mrs. Laura M. Boyer, daughter-in-law of Joseph Boyer as her son, Circuit Judge Arthur Webster voided the child’s birth certificate as Joseph Boyer III, and held he was not legally entitled to the benefits of the trust funds. The decision in effect, means the loss of millions to the child, now the adopted son of Laura M. Boyer. lyroni L. Boyer brought the suits, one to expunge the name oi the child from the birth records of the state as his son, and the other to disin- herit him, following discovery a year ago that Dode was not his real son. The discovery was made through a nurse, Miss Mabel Barrett who tes- tified todiy that the baby represent- ed as Boyer’s had been taken by her into the Boyer home when it was a few days old. She said a ant had ordered her to take the infant there.and told her Mrs. Boyer had | obtained the child from a girl in Windsor, Ontario. Admitting the deception, Mrs. Boyer said she smuggled the infant into her home and represented him as her son to satisfy her husband’s desire for a son to “save her home.” She is now estranged from her hus- \ band. AN ALSO RAN London.— A pigeon that started off in a race from Worcester two years ago has just returned to its owner's cote “1: Shropshire. RAILROAD WATER Little Drayton, Aguilares, Texas.—The people of ' this town have been depending on the Texas-Mexican railroad for their water for the past 50 years. The railroad hauls water in tank cars Buy now Lace and Harness Leather From Our Complete Stocks Always pay! highest prices or Hides - Furs - Wool - Junk “Northern” Hide & Fur Co. Bismarck, N. D. A prize package of Cracker Jack will be given to children under 14 years of age with each hair cut. THE CLASSIC BARBER SHOP Opposite Hotel Patterson Under the Standard Clothing Store PAGE NINE from Laredo, 20 ‘miles away, puts the cars on a siding, and the people carry their supply away in In t Month Is Yar Birthday? On your Birthday send your Mother Flowers Hoskins-Meyer Home of KFYB Slorby Studio look like a real man. Tell him_that the whole country |recognizes McCoy’s as the one great flesh builder. Tell him that thousands of men and women once just as thin as he are now proud of their well-knit at- itractive figures. One thin woman put on 15 pounds in six weeks. McCoy takes all the risk— Read this ironclad guarantee. If after taking 4 sixty cent boxes of McCoy’s |Tablets or 2 One Dollar boxes any |\thin, underweight man or woman doesn’t gain at least 5 pounds and feekh completely satisfied with the marked improvement in health — |your money will be refunded. |__ Just ask for McCoy’s Tablets at Finney’s Drug Store or any drug store. Distributed by McCoy’s Lab- oratories, Inc., also distributors of ica. they established a time of | followed an erratic course, hurdling 1795. From that time on the day McCoy’s Cod Liver Oil—there is none better.—Adv. 7. Holstein bulls Livestock Breeders Bismarck-Mandan Territory NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY 6 Purebred Holstein heifers 4 Grade Holstein cows " 10 Purebred milking Shorthorn females CATTLE SALE SO HEA Livestock Sales Pavilion Missouri Slope Fair Grounds Tuesday, Nov. 27, 1928 15 Yearling & two-year-old Hereford bulls 12 Purebred milking Shorthorn bulls 4 Guernsey bulls, purebred 26 Beef Shorthorn bulls PURE-BRED BULLS PURE - BRE GRADE HOLSTEIN COWS Several Angus bulls Duroc spring boars Cattle may be inspected on. Monday, November 26. No sales will be made before Tues- day, the 27th, at 8:30 a.m. On Tuesday, Nov. 27, at 11 a. m., the cattle will be exhibited in the sales ring of the pavilion and all buyers will be given full particulars regarding breeding of animals offered. All animals offered will be tested for tuberculosis. ‘ ‘TERMS: Cash. Make arrangements with your bank. Greater North Dakota A COOPERATING WITH A. R. Miesen County Agent, Bismarck .$00 LINE ssociation R. C. Newcomer _ County Agent, Mandan MINNEAPOLIS TRIBUNE D FEMALES to secure an SU noteworthy gone. you to make once. Men’s conservative worsteds—100% all wool—one pair trousers in neat patterns—tailored to retain their fit and shape—386 to 44 regular—39 to 52 stouts. Extra sizes a trifle higher. We are also featuring Supreme Values in Men’s and Young Men’s OVERCOATS At $ 1 6°° New Patterns and Fabrics with Weight and Style Our tremendous buying power and our policy of BUY-. ING and SELLING FOR CASH ONLY enable us to feature these very unusual values. McCracken Cash Stores “Golden Rule” Fourth and Broadway Something New Every Your Big Opportunity fine, carefully tailored $ ] Q:75 with two pairs of pants This lot represents a very made by our New York buy- ing organization and cannot be duplicated when these are It therefore behooves Young men’s styles in pres- ent-day patterns with double- breasted vest and two pairs trousers—sizes 34 to 42, unusual value in ITs purchase just your selection at Bismarck —