The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 4, 1929, Page 2

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f f i i { : ; 4 3 4 Hl 4 PAGE TWO daertishaes "CALL FOR SPECIAL TRAINS 10 PACIFIC Northern Pacific Arranges for) Side Trips From Cities of Annual Gatherings PARKS FIGURE Bankers of Nation to Scatter East From San Francisco by Northern N. P. Route IN TOURS St. Paul, April 4.—Conventions this summer in the Pacific Northwest and other Pacific coast cities will attract heavy travel through the Northwest, in the opinion of E. E. Nelson, passen- ger traffic manager of the Northern Pacific railway. Mr. Nelson said that special train, special car, and special party move- ments already arrariged are unusually heavy, particularly for the autstand- ing annual conventions: Among these larger conventions: will be the Shrine Imperial council session at Los An- geles, June 4, 5 and 6; the American Medical association convention at Portland, July 8 to 12; the American Bankers’ association convention at San Francisco, September 30 to Oc- tober 3; the Elks meeting at Los An- geles, July 7 to 12; the Catholic Cen- tral Verein meeting ‘at Salem, Ore., duly 14 to 17; the Disciples of Christ Anternational convention at Seattle, August 8 to 14; the Scandinavian Fraternity of America at Seattle, Au- gust 13 to 16; and the Knights of Khorassan meeting at Winnipeg, Au- Gust 13 to 16. In addition, arrangements already have been inade for escorted all- expense tours to Yellowstone Park and Alaska. These tours all show large bookings to date. For the Shrine meeting at Los An- geles a special train will carry a re- t caravan from that city, leaving there late at night on June 6, moving via Portland, Tacoma, Seattle and ‘Spokane, and over the lines of the lorthern Pacific through St. Payl and. Minneapolis. Visits will be made’ to of the prominent shrines and its of attraction in the Northwest. Portland Rose Festival associa- has sent special invitations to who will be aboard this spe- train which will pause an entire on Sunday, June 9, at that city.. Many of the delegates to the Atner- ican Medical association convention ‘will travel either to or from the con- vention through the Northwest, and the Northern Pacific has pre-arranged special tours for the benefit of..these delegates. A special coach will cairy over the northern route a party’ of * distinguished physicians from Roches- ter, Minn. Elks also will include in Plans a visit to Northwest ‘and Sound cities and scenic areas, ttle Elks have arranged a wa- val and celebration for the visitors on July 4. Pre-arranged trips through Yellow- stone Park have been planned by the Northern Pacific for the delegates both on the going and return trip. -An special train will operate from Chicago for the Catholic Central Ver- wing Chicago on July 10. the points of interest en ugust 4. These delegates will have an opportunity to visit Park and other of Khorassan will special train to Winnipeg, | - “Minneapolis on the f August oe heres of these plan visit Yelowstone following the convention. : Special arrangements have been [ ouToUR WAY tation est Slowest H8Srs38 Secococ ecco co ooocoocooPrecipi- JRIsAlasesasssass SSMBSSSSSsRSesssysssss “You know, I honestly don’t see how mother did it with four children.” made to accommodate a large number of bankers, their wives, and members of their families returning from the San Francisco convention» over the northern route. They will leave San Francisco on October 3 and Stops will be made at Portland, Longview, Wash., Tacoma, Seattle, Spokane, anc other interesting cities and scenic points. “Bankers in cities en route will entertain the visitors, and a spe- cial effort will be made to show these financial leaders the strides which have been made economically in the Northwest. Numerous other smaller conventions will take place in the Northwest and Pacific Northwest this year. OO . | AT THE MOVIES ; ° ° CAPITOL THEATRE The battle waged by Lonest against dishonest factions identified with traveling carnivals‘on which is based “The Spieler,” a dramatic Pathe pic: ture, obtains in real life exactly as set forth in this film, declares Renee’ This capable young actress, who plays the’ leading feminine role in “The. Spieler,” is the child of carnival performers. Much of het early life ‘was spent traveling with a French tent show. Consequently she makes this‘statemeht with authority. “- | . “Because it travels about from place to place, making only a short stay in each town, a carnival attracts many undesirables, hiding from. the law,” she explains. “The manage- ment of tent shows, naturally, bends every effort ‘o wipe out the nefarious + activities of these people, because any odium attached to the carnival pre- ‘cedes it from place to place and tends | to injure business. - Ses: “Most of the earnest performers, who look upon theif work as a-career quite as much as-a ‘livelihood, give +| their assistance in trying to blot out the blemishes on the reputation of carnivals. It is the flotsam and jet- sam, who are with one show today and. another tomorrow, with whom the difficulty Ties.” ; . Y although the plot is decidedly orig- inal and the characterization of the most up-to-date variety. Miss Moore appears as a typical example of the modern girl, her costumes and per- sonality being the last word, and her speech full of flippant wisecracks. Although the story of “Why Be Good?” is essentially humorous, there are moments of serious drama inter- spersed with the frivolous episodes, the question propounded in the title being answered in a dramatic climax that is said to equal the finest work Miss Moore has ever contributed to the screen. Neil Hamilton, in the chief support- ing role, is seen as Miss Moore's Iead- i mw the first time. a URGES PRIVACY FOR YOUNG LOVE London, April 4.— (NEA) — Shady,.moon-lit lanes, where two lovefs can indulge in’ innocent ‘ kisses Without prying cyes looking on, “should be a recognized insti- tution in London and other over- -crowded areas in England,” says Rev. J. Shepherd .of Islington chapel. : “Where, for example,” he asks, “can an engaged couple be alone in an overcrowded place like Lon- don? If by any chance they dare to kiss in the street, and are un- fortunate enough to be seen, the girl is marked as a bad woman and the boy described as obviously going to the devil.” .The, majority of gossips, the minister says, have pasts that well might be kept under cover. And for that reason, “let him who is without sin cast the first stone.” It is‘up to public officials, Rev. Shepherd thinks, to set: aside cer- tain ‘lares“where lovers “can talk naturally ‘together, hold hands, and maybe kiss each. other. I would certainly welcome the time when every overcrowded area has its acknowledged lovers’ lane— both in the parks and the city Atselt.~. “The Spieler” will be on view-at the |” Capital theatre tomorrow. ELTINGE THEATRE — :. America’s. carefree, unchaperoned youth, super-sophisticated and scorn- ful of propriety, is‘colorfully pictured |-than to take some fat reducing agent|him for such. “Not yet, boss! -{and lose. yeur.: youth, according to|negre said. in the Eltinge theatre's screen at tion.for Friday and Saturday, “Why Be Good?”—in which Colleen Moore plays the stellar role. CENSORS FAT REDUCERS New York.—If you have a plump figure, it’s better to leave it that way Prof. L. Kofler of Innsbruck, Austria. These agents, he says, contain cathar- ; | tics, Fucus -vesiculosos and ‘ iodine. Summer of Heavy Group Travel Through Northwest Indicated . ‘wanveowemons, (Seca MRT TOUS 3 BADGES AT COURT OF HONOR AT ST. MARY'S One Star Rank Conferred and First Achievemtnt Award on Handicaps Among 33 First and second class merit badges were conferred on 40 Boy Scouts at @ court of honor held, Wednesday evening, at St. Mary's auditorium. There, was a large attendance of Scouts and their friencs. W. G. Ful- ton, regional executive, was in ¢ of the boys, headed by their scout masters, and Judge A. M. Christian- son presided over the court of honor exercises, . Other scout leaders as Father John Slag, R. D. Hoskins, Ben Cave, J. N. Roherty, of Bismarck, and Dr. R. E. Percy, of Mandan, were in attendance and took part :n the ceremonies. Clell Gannon and Russell Reid put on an exhibition of their North Da- kota scenery and nature slides, these being a big treat for the scouts, show- ing, as they did, snakes and- birds and flowers, besides fine swimming and fishing haunts’ in the state's rivers, with the’ Bad Lands naturally colored as the crowning group of pictures. PS J. N. Roherty, of the State High- way commission, gave a talk on en- gineering as a profession. The badges were presented to the scouts by Judge Christianson through Mr, Roherty, R. D. Hoskins, Ben Cave and Dr. Percy. Following were the recipients of awards: Star rank for five merit badges— Charles Shearn, Garvin Croonquist, Ben Cave. First class badge—Arthur Hoff- man. b : Second achievement badge—Vin- cent Case. This was the first badge of this character awarded in the area, It ranks as an incomplete sec- ond class badge. The winner is phys- ically handicapped and could not make all the qualifications for a full first class award. Seeond class—Carroll ‘Baker, John Yeasley, Joe Wright, Thomaa Cul- William ‘Culbertson, Anton Geiger, Casper Keller, John Dixon. The merit badges went to these Scouts in the several classes of merit awards: MILDRED LAWRENCE, sten- ographer at the Judson Hotel, has her fox fur snatched from her in a crowd, but STEPHEN ARMI- TAGE catches the thief and re- turns the scarf. He asks to take her home. Not wishing to seem ungrateful, she invites to din- ner. f The evening is spoiled when PAMELA JUDSON, daughter of Mildred’s employer, phones her to return to duty. Stephen escorts her to the hotel where Pamela recognizes him as the salesman who had sold her a car. She snubs Mildred and tries to lure Stephen away from her by pre- tending she wants to buy another car from him, Then Pamela meets HUCK CONNOR, who tells her he is a broker from Chicago. Mildred thinks that Stephen is forgetting her since the wealthy girl is playing for his attention. Then he invites her to attend the theater and she accepts, not knowing that Pamela and Huck Connor are to be there. Stephen did not know they were coming either until the arrival, and he feels responsible when Pamela treats Mildred snobbishly. He is also suspicious of Huck and ob- jects to having Pamela trust him too far. This Mildred thinks is jealousy on his part and a cool- ness comes up between them. * ek NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER IX Stephen made a mistake when he suspected that Huck would ask Pa- mela to a night club. Huck was too well known at all of these places to risk it. He didn't want his world to find out that’ he -was interested in the girl. It would leak out soon, of course, but he intended to-put through. his plans before anyone started In- terfering, and that would mean be- fore Pamela's father returned from abroad. As his car moved through the traffic and Pamela sat back with ill- concealed impatience, Huck let his First aid to animals—Ralph Rand, Robert Edick, Ray Evans. ~~ Leathercraft—Chester Perry, Raj Evans, Garvin Croonquist. Civics—Raymond Jenkins, . Robert Haskins, Bennie Casper, Charles Shearn, Garvin Croonquist, Lester Casey. aes Conservation—Lloyd Murphy, Rob- ert Edick, Garvin Croonquist, Bud Munger, Melvin Reeder. - . é Firemanship—John Cameron, .E. ‘MtDonald, Huston Galyen, Billie Cul- bertson, Thomas Culbertson, P. Mc- Donald, William Cayo, Kasper Keller, Anton Geiger. oa Personal health—Vincent Case, Russell Saxvik, Garvin Croonquist. Animal industry—Melvin Reeder, Ralph Rand, Robert Edick, Bud’ Munger, Raymond Evans, Bookbinding—Bennie Casper, Les- ter Casey, Lloyd Drennan, . Donald Bowman, Albert Westbrook. : Marksmanship—Robert’ © Hoskins, Charles Shearn, Robert Edick. Pathfinding—Russell Saxvik, Jack Mathewson, Robert Hoskins, Vincent Case. Carpentry—Swenton Taylor, Emil ‘WORKING FOR A FIGHT -" Kenosha, Wis.—A young negro walked into police headquarters re- cently and inquired of the desk ser- geant, “How much fo’ beatin’ up a fella?” The officer replied that it |would cost $25 and asked what the other “fella” had done to the negro. “He done resulted me,” the darkey remarked. “He cast despersions on mah ancestrals.” The officer, think- ing the negro had come to confess assault and battery, started to book ithe 0 “Ah done got to wait’ll payday to. beat that fella up! Ah only got eight bucks.” The story of this comedy-drama is|These constituents break down the|, The circumference of the largest of the type that first carried Miss Moore to'the heights of popularity, youth of agent. Persons using the reducing sangiog tree in this country: is 39 j ITS TH SAME PRINCPUL DONT SEEM \AS TH FELLER TAKA)! T’ DO NO GooD.)OFF HIS OvER COAT AN! HOLOIN' IT TO WEIGH WISSELF. 17S TH! WEIGHT ©! TH’ DARN STHINGS WHICH MAKES] By. Williams OH SUMMER THOU: ART NEARLY ON US, FORE WE GiT TH’ WINTERS OFF uS;: Cuz.0uR: MAS eyes feast upon. -her, --He made no. attempt to mask them. Pamela was watching the sea of faces that moved:|" by, some of them turned with frank curiosity toward her and her com- Ppanion. The silkiness of her smooth. blond hair—Huck knew it wasn’t bleached — the haughty curve where her ‘chin’ merged into her throat, appealed to him.. He liked fineness. And fine- ness in women had been denied him. | her. The wealth of jewels Pamela wore meant nothing to him. He wanted Pamela because he: was madly infat- uated with her. He had tried to stem the tide of madness when first: he realized that it was sweeping over him. His better judgment told him it was dangerous to fall in love with ® girl like Pamela. But he might as well have tried to stop the- North River from flowing out to sea, = | , A sudden slowing of the car when @ pedestrian darted unexpectedly: in front of it threw them closer to- gether, Pamela drew quickly away. She was uneasy. The quiet force of Huck's personality. was beginning to disturb her. She remembered ‘that Harold had warned her he'd been: unable to learn anything concerning the man. It was one thing to flirt -with him in her father’s hotel, another to be out with him alone. Pamela was not too sheltered to know: that wolves still prowled ee ag clothing. . se oe “Well, I'm no Little Red Riding Hood,” she told herself scornfully, but she was not sorry to arrive home. She started to say good night as as they entered the lobby, but Huck Pleaded for a-dance in the grill. . “I'm tired,” Pamela said, shortly, | but there was nothing in her ap- -|Pearancg to bear her out in her. ex- ga BES Foe he'd feared she might. “But it’s simply fmpossible to tickets,” ‘she said hopelessly. = - “Tl get-them,”* Huck “but not more than six, : ik is 8 diet le REPT fruadlne ain 5 FE i 8 ist i | i 5 lie : just now we've got a date with Huck.” “Oh, have we?” “Yes, we have. He's got tickets, Tickéts, boy, that you couldn't buy for love or money.” “The new revue! Go on down and hold him to it while I phone up a crowd.” “I don’t suppose you Angela?” Harold said, wavering be- sone the bait and his better judg- ment. “I would not! Did you see any- thing of Margola’s bunch? They were coming around to pick me up for the Webley’s dance. “I just got in,” Harold told her. “They may be downstairs.” Pamela found her friends in the grill. Later someone got raked over the coals for not having told her they were waiting. There were a dozen in the party, but Pamela got Margola aside, and they planned to. Separate two more and then give the others the slip. Pamela never bore down lightly on account of expense. And with Huck to foot the bills there seemed no occasion to do 50. They had good seats and a sumptuous supper. Huck was the perfect host, a little older and more formal than his guests, but Pamela saw that he in- terested Margola not a little. aie eee bea fmd, she tea eep him. “Nothing doing,” she declared when she heard Mar- gola tell Huck she'd like to dance with him. “He's. promised not to dance with anyone but me.” And while the show was in prog- ress and the lights were dimmed she let him hold his arm on the back of her chair, with the tips of his fingers touching her shoulder, without pull- ing away. Huck’s petting was cer- tainly tame, she told herself, but a wee voice whispered back that he hadn't started yet. Pamela turned her head to look at him and met his eyes full upon her face, She could not read them, but she knew that-if she could she , t have found their message ami “Great idea, reviving the: roof. gar- | got den show, isn’t it?” she said lamely. “Are you having a good time?” Huck asked in-return. “Like it?” hy experiencing through the knowledge that this man beside’ her! Wat- <falfing’ so hard he'd got to the point of trembling over her | to opinion of his efforts to entertain And when next they danced to- gether and Huck held her closer she dropped her head-on ‘his shoulder and told herself she might be playing with fire but it certamly was éxciting. She had forgotten Stephen, who. had called the hotel and found no one wished to speak to him. Harold, too, was - succumbing Huck’s campaign to win ‘his confi- dence; There-was absolutely about the fellow that was offensive ‘86 far as he could observe. RAILROADS REDUCE FREIGHT CLAIMS BY NEW BPFIGIENCIES Total Damages Paid in 1928 $36,557,243; Cut Down $2,155,816 in 1927 the railroads of th united é ies and. Canada in, 1828, freight shipments: ‘were the smallest for any year since the end of the world war, despite. a continued up- _|ward trend-in the amount of trafi handled, acording to.complete reports for the year. just received from the rail carriers by the ht claim di- vision of the American lway asso- ciation and made public today. The amount of claims paid in 1928 totaled $36,557,243. This was a reduc- tion of $2,155,816, compared with 1927 and a reduction of $1,630,072 com- On the basis of the total numiber of cars loaded with revenue freight, freight claims paid by the railroads in 1928 averaged 68 cents per car, com- pared with 72 cents in 1927. Thirteen of the 16 causes for freight claims in 1928 reflected reductions un- der 1927, The greatest reduction for any one item resulted from the in- creased promptness with which freight shipments were handled dur- ing the last year, compared with the ‘Great time,” he said to Huck when they left the place, and in his voice was admiration. power. Another thing in Huck’s favor in Harold's eyes was the fact that Huck hadn't once made. a ren _, that could be construed as a lead to a per- son he intended to victimize. Harold called Mildred’s warning “imagina- tion,” when he thought of it later that night. Huck had come up to Harold's ‘room for a nightcap and Harold had introduced Wall Street into the con- versation. Huck had not appeared interested in the subject. “Pamela tells me you're a broker,” Harold said finally. Huck waved that aside carelessly. “To be frank with you, I’ve retired and enly take a flyer now and. then, for the pleasure. You see, I had a run of Tuck: when ‘I “I don't see how you could,” Harold remarked, “I: like :to gamble and?l can’t quit it.” “Well, old -man, “too imake: an éffort to be ch “I thought so.too until I found that. “self answers all questions save one—that from every angle, the it-becomes that no car in the-wotld © question.is: “How soon can-I get one?” Themore one goesinto the facts; and ~ gives.so. much at or anywhere. near $1000. Study theseinteresting features: THURSDAY-APRITA. 109° Tune in on KFYR every morning for the A. W. Lucas Co. day’s special. fora man of |; smiled as one afflicted trying |, a be cheerful: H. A.Mutehler. | * 410 Fourteenth Street Bismarck, No. Dak. Representing The Northwest Nursery Co. Valley City, N. D., 7 I could get ® kick out of ‘playing the ponies,” he: said: lightly; “I'm pretty) atarald“hdgandal him" chyicy.) asthe oa i F “My luck 1s rotten,” he said gloamily, Pett it ag Then a brighter expression peaed || COLLEGE INN | over his countenance. “! wen’ tried the ponies,” he added hopefully. AN TN And that-hight’ when Huck left fi| own as he had geld. ‘Instead he took. own as le a taxicab to air athiress inthe West | « x ¥ aebstab baat acest aden are [ the more: apparen "same cae and tt ts ahead Marne owners RIGHT FOR + PUR § sd ee co ee

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