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i > PAGE SIX. W., AYERS CHOSEN | PRESIDENT OF LIONS; | ‘KOLLER, SECRETARY Plans for Ladies’ Night May 20) and for Trip to Minot Are Worked Over by Club ‘W. 8. Ayers was elected president of the Lions club at the noon lunch- | eon, today, and had a narrow escape | from being chosen unanimously the two other nominees, F. E. M Gurdy and Obert A. Olson, tried to withdraw in his favor but were rulcd | out of order. The club apparently cit that everybody slated by the nomin- ating committee was deserving of recognition in the form of votes the election was by ballot. For vice presidents, the club elected Dr. C. D. Dursema, first; Dr. A Fisher, second; and D. E. Ship third. | E. O. Bailey and G. L. Spear dis- couraged voting in their behalf for secretary by announcing they could not give the time to the position. Dr. William Sides Koller was chosen for the post, being promoted from the of- fice of tail twister. Henry Hanson was elected treasur- er; Wiliam Doty, tail twister; Roland H. Crane, lion tamer; and Sofus Rob- inson, Joe Spies and Dr. F. B. Strauss, | directors. | Start Mosquito Camp: Ai the suggestion of F. E. McCurdy, Joe Spies and A. L. Bavone we Named a committee to see the other service clubs and interest them in conducting a mosquito exterminating | campaign in conjunction with — the state and the city health departments of Bismarck and Mandan. Mr. Spies started such a campaign last summer and Mr. Bavone, as stale sanitary | enginecr. with the aid of Dr. J. D. | Jungman, mosquito expert of the State Health department, has taken preliminary steps to get the federal | government interested in a mosquito drive through the Public Health serv- ice. Captain 1. A. Brocopp brought up the junior baseball league in an ef- fort to get the service clubs interested in putting teams in the league. W. S. Ayers and David Shipley were named a comunitice to take up the; maticr. Elaborate Ladies Night It was announced that there will; be no luncheon next Monday, the club | devoting its energies for that day to, the ladies night in the evening at the Elks hall. There, at 9 o'clock, besides | lunch and dancing, some stunts to be | staged at the Minot district confer- ence will be rehearsed. There will be ten MacIntyre dancers in the cast! and five Lions—the comedians of the | club—and the stunt will partake of | the nature of a Shakespearean com- edy, as Midsummer Night’s Dream. Miss Bismarck, the lady of mys- tery, who is to go to Minot with the | Lions as a sort of city representative ‘nd ride in the parade, will then be disclosed. One of the prettiest girls 4n the city, one with intelligence and @ocial graces to recommend her, has been selected and will prove a sur- prise to the ladies night participants. | te Minot Uniformed The district conference at Minot | Was one of the big topics at the! Auncheon. The Lions are making clab- | erate arrangements to do Bismarck honor at Minot, May 22-24. They ‘will wear uniforms of purple and gold hats, white coats and trousers and @arry purple and gold lacquered @anes. D. E. Shipley will be marshal ( heck dit nd the check of the Bismarck division of the par-| Freiburg. For 170 years, the Fass- | proved eiee see ade, on horseback. A fine gray|nachts have played the leading roles|" pon, Koza's wife the assistant | charger has been selected for him by @ Minot friend. The ladics from Bis- marck are planning to wear purple and gold capes and purple and gold turbans, with purple Bismarck rib- bons. A committee to manage the candi- dacy of Dr. F. B. Strauss for district | governor will function until the! election has been held. Guests present were C. H. Lamb, of the accounting department of the Lucky Strike Coal company; and E. J. Erickson, of Florence, S. D. GROVE GIANTS WI | FROM FORT YATES | The Grove Giants Saturday in their second game of the season slugged their way to a 5 to 1 victory over the Fort Yates nine at the state prison | baseball diamond. | Fort Yates used two pitchers in an effort to stop the hard-hitting Giants. | Stroller, young Giant catcher. poled | out a homer, and Evenson, shortstop, garnered three hits in four trips to the platter. Corrall, pitching for the Giants, al- lowed but five hits. The box score: Grove Giants. Sigman, cf Holland, 2b ° > ol 11 0} 1) 2\ 1 3 1 3 i) 12) i Blonommernwm | mmoracour 8 2 1) 1] 0 3 0, Slewcwwcamen Sl swwemmnone al sconococone Bl cconccoeme ° Hf Family of Passion Players on Broadway | Fassnacht, who jin “the passion”—Judas, Mary, John, |to watch a man jor ring for a pi | penditures is indicated in the sett “Zland the costumes | Born to the le; honor of the Upper right are George F: rited calling, her Adolph in the role of J: snacht, dy. Johr of Nazareth; left is Amalie, as the > Baptist; George, Er, who THF BISMARCK TRIBUNE. oles of ihe Freiburg Passion Piay, and trained from childhood to the responsibility and are pictured five of the Fassnacht family now apps: aring on Broadway. Virgin Mary. Belov’, left to right, 5 Judas; Blca, the Mary Magdalene, By GILBERT SWAN New York, y 13.-(NEA)- Sever q of America had been discovered, the | | | | simple, superstitious peasant folk of | Freiburg, in Baden, produced upon | their pastoral hillside a pageant of | | the Christ story as visioned by monks | | and stout bughers. | i ch eas It seems that certain timid ones; who had brooded long over the! Minot Cops Say Man Had Teeth cerie mysteries of the Black Forest, | which borders their town, had seen the Devil himself leave the Schwarz- wald and enter the tow So the im- itation of Chiist was given to keep Sutan out. Thus the Passion Play | has come down through ti H And now the revei Pulled That He might Issue | Worthless Checks Minot, N. D., May 13.— jing accusations that he had had sev ous dentists issue them order that he might} natural theater wu 3 to face the and of the charge and collect the differ- chaos of Broadway, the world’s most/ence, Edwin Koza, of many aliases, | hectic highway. [is im jail here today charged with| Hears ef Bs “But wh nission ti s brought here Sunday from Bag- Minn., where he was arrested. le a Adolph | “yi. E. Johnson, assistant state's at-| to the role |; “Tt is more! of Jesus of Na necessary today than ever that the \Chirgt story reach the greatest num- ber of people. So we consented to| 4 eee eee ont pats |in more than half of the states in the | Lage eae eae 7 union, issuing worthless checks. that this Broadway has more | oso 3 Devils than ever inhabited the whole | 7: 4 Wagner. chief of police of Mi d the whole | not, has received a letter from an ee a ee believe to be Koza recently visited devout and tradition-bound. to. the| ete and negotiated ey preraeacra role he plays. ‘There {s little of thal pi 8 Grus site. ooo ee aeons actor about him. He is a peasant, as a freee Ae @ ‘4 of the purciia: price was are his family members and the 35/0 Pee roe veo other players brought with him from |Covecting the $150 the writer n information receive@ trom the P Ir issued. of the N oat : al the Magdalene and the Blind Woman. |S42te | attorney also | leathed thal “My family literally took upon it-| 024 1s a member of , |Hand” society in Chicago and Cicero, | self the responsibility for the Passion | 1) bagi cpocjedida| Play back in 175 EiGonE d, with ae pat ins allegation the prisoncr the aid of an interpreter. “One of | = <r = t ¥ oszit is wanted at Grand For! my great-grandsires believed that the | Grooeston, Minn., and several other pageant had departed its | ms a earlier traditions and was degenerat- |“ties in the northwest, ing. He went to the town couneil and aah aais"ee’s'tt) EPISCOPAL MEETING “His petition was thet he, and] members of his family, might be ai-| Vargo. N. Dak., May 13.—(?)—Ap- | lowed to assure the responsibility for | the ceremony. His potition was} granted, with the pr 50 that the} council could take the sacred story | proximately 40 delegates were in at-/| back at any tim? if the Fassnachts | tendance here today at the convoca-! did not produce it 1 due reverence | tion in Gethsemane cathedral of all and beauty opal churehes in North Dakota. Bishop J. P. Tyler, Fargo, is presid- ing. \ Reports of the various church insti- “So you can vinderstand how care- fully we have been groomed during | tutions and district officers and elec- | tion of delegates to the provincial the many generations.” | The Fassnachts are liter: born | to the roles they must play. The; are trained from childhood to the re- | synod were important matters on to- | sponsibility and so are the peasants day's program. ‘The state women’s! who play the various minor roles. /auxiliary held a separate business | There is George. jas, session this afternoon. ey } role of who has the and Amalie, Elsa, Magdalene; plays the Virgin Mary. Baptist; Mary Fargoans Face Count | Of Reckless Driving) Fargo, N. D., May 13.—()—Charges of reckless driving have been placed against W. L. Miller, cab driver and G. H. Hellberg as the result of an accident here Saturday night inj; which John Southam, a passenger in {the cab, was injured. Southam is jan Agricultural college student. ‘Lake Church Will Burn Its Mortgage Devils Lake, N. D.. May 13.—(4%—~ ris {| Bishop Wallace E. Brown, head of the | and David Bela Even the base-| Helena, Mont., area of the Methodist ! ment section, whic’: once housed tie | church, will speak at the twelfth anni- Hippodrome midgets end. animals.} versary celebration of thé new church. has been turned into a theairicalized| and t' jortgage burning service segment of Jerusalem. In the the-/ here this evening. ater proper, glaring arc lights cent the tableaux figures and fabulous barn rcarere arc BAI Reta | Additional Markets ie BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck. May 13 i . 1 dark northern . 1 northern .... . 1 amber durum . 1 mixed durum . 1 red durum 1 flax who Present a Parado: Projected from their pastoral valley home into a modern hotel in the sky- line belt, the Fassnachts s doxically casi odd. f the Christ role a telephone The r of surroundings of elevators a em equally strange. Finally there is the gigantic Hippo- drome Theater, in which they appear, which has been provided with ever} appurtenanc> of modern stage craft | and lavish decorat within the im- agination and means of Mi > ef some 1,000 extras. * Bewildered by Metropstis It’s all very far away from the open hillsides of Freiburg. And the Fass- nachts admit they were more than a little bewildered upon their arrival for rehearsal. It was a vast ond in-/ redible change from the company actors, picked from the peas- BS Py a 832 tig England bowing to America’s \been less checks in execs |town for a brief v “Black | God. | Additional Society | Mrs. Shute Leaves For Minrewauken After Visit Here A. Lincoln Shute, who has siting in Bismarck with rela- for the past week, left this xning by car with her mother, Mrs. W. OQ. Ward, and her sister, Miss * ° | ° Mrs. ‘Deny- | Aldyth Ward, for Minnewaukan. Here they will be guests of Mrs. Shute's S eral of his good teeth puiled by vari- | brother, Ralph Ward, for a few days. Mrs. Shute plans to stop in James- it with friends be- fore returning to her home at Erie, Ill. Dr. and Mrs. Shute made their home in Jamestown a number of countless “bum” check offenses. Koza | years ago. This was Mrs. Shute’s first visit to Bismarck in eight years. Since that lime she and Dr. Shute have been orncy, based his teeth-pulling charge | stationed in India, and more recently in Kentucky and Illinois, where Dr. Ac-| Shute is now pastor of the Methodist church at Erie. * * * Junior League Has Special Program , adership” was the topic of an inspiring talk given by Miss Katheryn Marcks at the meeting of the Junior League of the Trinity Lutheran church last evening. Miss Evely Ellingson, accompanied by Mary Louise Nuessle, played a vio- lin solo, “Melody Lane,” Evelyn Koef- fel read “Before it is Too Late.” and a girls chorus sang “Search Me, O Other musical numbers were given by Ruth Saxvik, Evelyn Nelson, Wal- ter Ulmer, and the girls chorus, ac- companied by Miss Marcks. In recognition of Mother's day, Jean Fritz gave “A Tribute to Mother.” The meeting was concluded with a short talk by Rev. O. S. Rindahl. Grand Forks County Playday Boasting Record Attendance Crand Forks, N. D., May 13.—(?)— The largest crowd in the history of the event attended the fifteenth an- nual Play Day exercises of Grand Forks county schools which opened with spelling. music end declamation events at Larimore this morning. Erwin Lowen, district 24, Emerado, won first honors in the rural school spelling and will represent the county in the contest at the North Dakota State fair here. HOSE RATES FOR WATER Summer hose rates have been re- established by the city water depart- ment. The charge will be the winter average, plus 300 feet, and all over it 17 cents, or less than half the cgular rate of 3712 cents. Rats Put to New Use In Fish Meal Studies May Baltimore, 13.—(?)—Rats, llong the aides of scientists, are as- sisting research here in being merely well fed and happy. They exist on a diet of fish meat in a cooperative investigation of the bureau of fisheries and John Hop- kins university. The object is‘to de- termine what fish make the best meal and what treatment is neces- sary to conserve the most nourish- ment. Fish meal, which is fed to farm and other wastes that accumulate ‘after portions have been selected for human use. Various methods, from flame to vacuum drying, have been used to convert the waste. From the effect of the food on the rats, the cooking which preserves the greatest nutri- tive value to be found. ice water drinking habits. London’: [ieee eatolatio® lias fiaported’ an icing system. é jas revealed today. ~ | teutious stock, is produced from trimmings | f! MEMORIAL PROJECT WORKERS DIVIDE CAMPAIGN DUTIES Subcommittees Appointed and | Headquarters Opened in Cowan Building ‘The memorial building campaign committee held a meeting Sunday afternoon and organized for the cam- Paign leading up toand including the city referendum election on the proposed $125,000 bond issue for the building. R. J. Kamplin Legion, is chairman of the gencral committee. The committee also opened cam- jpaign headquarters in the Cowan building. southeast corner of Fourth and Broadway. | The following subcommittecs were named: Executive Committee—Harry W. Rosenthal, chairman, Carl Knudtson, Harold Hopton, Major Harold Soren- son, Captain H. A. Brocopp, P. G. Harrington, Kenneth Simons, A. L. Fosteson, and Chas, F. Martin. Legion Auxiliary Memorial Build- ing Committee—Mrs. G. Olgierson, chairman, Mrs. B. E. Hitchcock, Mrs. Gerald Richholt, and Mrs. A. D. Mc- Kinnon. Finance Committee—Dr. J. 0. Arnson, chairman, A. D. McKinnon, and Henry J. Duemeland. Workers’ Committee —Harry W. Rosenthal, chairman, Mrs. C. G. Boise. Mrs. Henry Hanson, John H. of the iBurlington Store | Robbed Last Night Minot, N. D., May 13.—(7)—A store at Burlington was burglarized last night of a considerable quantity of merchandise and about $35 in money, according to a report received at the sheriff's office here this morning. The store is owned by Einar Madsen. OFFICIALS STUDY ~~ NEWSPRINT RATES Minneapolis, May 13.—(?)—Repre- sentatives of railroads from through- out the United States and Canada, newspaper, associations and individ- ual newspapers, paper manufacturers and shippers, were in Minneapolis to- day for a hearing before an examiner of the interstate commerce commis- sion on newsprint freight rates. The hearing is expected to continue for two weeks or more, when it will adjourn to be resumed late in July in some eastern city. '__ MONDAY, MAY 13, 1929 ‘KELLOGG SAYS HOPE | FOR PEAGE IS GREAT St. Paul, May 13.—(4)—Official and public sentiment the world over is in- creasingly in favor of peace and dis- armament, Frank B. Kellogg, former U. 8. secretary of state, said today as he resumed the private practice of law. Mr. and Mrs. Kellogg returned here Sunday after a month’s tour of Europe. “I found in Europe, as is the case allover the world, a very strong sen- timent for world peace and an in- creasing sentiment for disarmament and limitation of armament,” the former secretary of state said. “I think a large degree of disarma- ment is bound to come, perhaps not immediately but in the comparatively near future. I believe that the rela- tions of the United States are better tcday with all the powers of the world than they have ever been be- fore. This comes from a better un- derstanding of the problems con- fronting the various nations.” The action under which the hearing is being conducted provides for a general investigation of the news- print rate structure in the United States and on shipments originating in Ontario and Quebec. Virtually all Minnesota paper marufacturers, as well as others throughout the nation, | are represented. VALUABLE TORTOISE London, May 13.— Officials of the Imperial Airways here recently were surprised when they opened a small flat box left by a passenger. . The box contained a live tortoise, all Bowers, S. W. Corwin, Frank Clau- sen, Captain H. A. Brocopp, and Fred Conklin. Publicity Committee—Kenneth Simons, chairman, Charles Goodwin, Miss Amy Fahlgren, J. G. MacGregor, A. L. Fosteson, and . Kelly. Statistical Committee—Chas. F. Martin, chairman, Lyman Baker, Myron Atkinson, Kenneth Simons, and Wm. M. Schantz. Speakers’ Committec—H. F. O'Hare. chairman, Mrs. Obert Olson, Mrs. James Morris, P. G. Harrington, and Carl Knudtson. Women's Clubs Committee—Mrs. Fred Conklin, chairman, Mrs. F. H. ‘Waldo, and Miss Chrissie E. Budge. Public Meeting Committee—Walter Sather, chairman, and Dr. F. B. Strauss. Advertising Committee—M. B. Gil- man, chairman, and “V. 8. Ayers. §. D. ROAD MAGNET ATTRACTS: NOTICE J. P. McCarthy Brings Back Photo of Safety Device That Saves Tires J. P. McCarthy brought .back from a business trip into South Dakota a Photograph of an electric magnet which is run over the roads in that state, to pick up metallic objects like- ly to puncture tires. The electric magnet is slung under an ordinary truck and is operated by a motor in the body of the truck. As it moves over the roads, tacks, nails, bits of iron and, sometimes, crow- bars are fished up from the surface. The magnet has averaged 600 pounds of metal to 24 miles. cost, Mr. McCarthy was told was shown to be $20.60 for 160 miles, in a test. The operator is paid wages and given the metal which he picks up. He realizes a neat sum out of this junk, said Mr. McCarthy, as some of the metal picked up is not waste. but such things as tire pumps, lifting jacks and automobile tools. EIGHT LEONARD MEN FACE RIOT CHARGES Fargo, N. D., May 13.—(®)—Riot charges have been placed against eight men of Leonard as a result of an alleged attack on special Deputy Sheriff D. J. Walters and E. I. Cady recently and they went on trial in Cass county court here today. ‘The men were arrested on charges of assault and battery but after an investigation, State's Attorney John C. Pollock, changed them to riot charges. The defendants are: Elmer Bur- ton, John, Ed, and Ben Thompson, Milo and Merle Bullis and Joe Vas- quez. Separate charges of interfering with an officer in discharge of his duty have been placed against John Thompson and Vasquez. Walters and Cady, it is charged, were beaten by the eight men. o { City-County Briefs | ° ° George Duemeland of the Patter- son Land company left Sunday on @ business trip to Minneapolis. Miss Bertha Palmer, state super- intendent of rublic instruction, to- returned from Wi , where me attended the etea bate Teachers convention. She was gone 10 days. s ty wrapped up in pink cotton-wool, its back studded with rubies, emeralds and other precious stones. SMALL SATISFACTION London, May 13.—After serving three months in prison, Ernest Lee, 35, recelved a pardon and $500. It was found after he had served this time on a charge of posing as a brew- er’s agent and collecting a commis- sion, that another man was guilty. The guilty party, already in jail on another crime, confessed. GET FEW DRINKS London, May 13.—An old house off Cheapside holds one of the strangest parties in England. Once ». year city men and women gather here for a feast. At the conclusion of the re- Past, a huge cheese is brought in. If any one of the guests guesses the weight, height and girth correctly, champagne is served. Since the cus- tom has been instituted, however, ee has been served only 15 times. THIS IS NO PRIVILEGE London.—There are some aimbu- lances that you have to pay a pretty Penny to ride in this city. The Me- tropolitan Asylums Board has a fleet of 250 high-powered ambulances. For about $2.50 one of these motor am- bulances will take you any place in London. They are heated by hot wa- ter pipes running from the engine and are mounted on special springs which climinate road shocks. TEST HOUSE HEAT Urbana, Ill, May 13.—Since 1918, a nine-room house has been experi- mented with here by engineering de- partments of the University of Il- linois. The house has been used for heating experiments only. Various types of heat, from hot air and open grates to steam, have been tried here to determine their efficiency. POSTAL HEADS MAY NAME MINNESOTAN ‘Washington, May 13.—(7)—Official circles today were discussing a report that Arch Coleman, postmaster at Minneapolis, was being strongly con- sidered for the post of first assistant Postmaster general to succeed John H. Barthlett, who has been offered the chairmanship of the international Joint commission. MOTOR TO CRATER TOP Wailuku, Maiu Island, T. H., May 13th.—When the new auto road is completed to the top of Haleakala, motorists will be able to drive to the top of the world’s largest extinct volcano crater. The road will rise to a height of 10,000 feet above sea level. At present one can motor to within ten miles of the crater. From there the trip must be made on foot. TALKING ANIMALS Montreal.—Harry Allen, Cain riv- er district guide, claims that animals talk. He is experimenting with radio to prove that they do. He believes that radio will solve the question by showing that animals use wave- lengths inaudible to the human ear. BEHAVIOR BAROMETER Durham. N. H.—What a child wears influences its behavior, according to Hazel Hill, University of New Hamp- shire clothing specialist. Shy young- sters feel uncomfortable and irritated in bright colors, she says. The viva- cious child revels in bright colors, and doesn’t feel right in subdued ones. ~ THEY'RE BANKS, ANYHOW New York, May 13.—A restaurant here is housed in a steel vault form- erly used by a bank. The walls of the vault are 36 inches thick and on the outside are tempered with steel Plates. The doors weigh 40 tons. HANDLE WITH CARE London, May 13.—A drinking glass has been on the market here which is used for ice water without any ice. It is made of ice, itself, and is said to be very hygienic. It will last for about an hour in an ordinary room. Minot Man Is Found Dead in Mouse River ‘ Minot, N. D, May 13.—(P)—T. Christensen, employed here as a tail- or, lost his life here Sunday after- noon while swimming across the Mouse river. It is thought that heart trouble caused his death, His body was quickly recovered, the water be- ped only two feet deep where it was found. LEGION WILL HAVE 8 MINOT DELEGATES Plans far Trip to State Conven- tion Discussed; Also Junior Baseball Lioyd Spetz post, American Legion, discussed the trip to the state con- vention at a meeting Sunday, May 22, the post will hold election of delegates to the convention. Harry Lynn was present from Lin- ton and made a talk. The junior baseball league was discussed and it was proposed that the service clubs of the city be asked to enter teams. This proposal will be laid before the clubs at their luncheons this week. It was announced that the post now has 326 members, which will entitle it to eight delegates in the state con- seas GRAIN MEN SEEK DULUTH RATE GUT St. Paul, May 13.—()—A reduction of 2'% cents a hundredweight on wheat and flour carried from the Twin Cities to Duluth for export will be sought by railroads operating in ae territory, it was announced to- lay. The interstate commerce commis- sion will be asked to sanction the de- crease regardless of whether Great ; Lakes boat lines agree to make a cut in their rates. The decrease is asked ie line with a proposal of western rail lines to aid President Hoover in his Plan to encourage export of the sur- Plus wheat crop. ‘. It is proposed by the Northern Pa- cific, Great Northern and other lines in this territory that sufficient reduc- tions be made on wheat and flour moving from here to New York by rail and water to bring the cost 4 cents a hundredweight under the pro- posed emergency all-rail rate between the same points. Club Organizer Here To See Brittin Women On Homemaker Plans Miss Grace DeLong, of the college women’s club extension service, ar- rived here today from Fargo for two days work among the women of the county, on club organization. . Her first trip into the county was to Brittin, today, where she was scheduled to mcet the women of the community at the home of Mrs. George Morrison and discuss organ- ization of a Homemakers club in the town, ‘Tuesday she will make a trip into some other section to discuss club or- ganization. e new. The coming of Spring is a signal - wall paper make a world of difference Py While you are redecorating, how about that piece of furniture that poe scratched up with his toys? We can refinish it and make it look Elite Decorating redecorate. Mr. Benjamin Fisk is in charge of our paper hanging de Envugh said. His personal attention will be at your Pisin yl all times. Our corps of skilled decorators stands Teady. to serve your needs. Wi should be glad to plan with you regarding your decorating problems. : PHONE 1397 BEN FISK, Manager Specialising in Fine Paper Hanging, Decorating and Farniture Refinishing 323 Fourth Street : the appearance of your home. _ Company Fresh paint and new ent. a re —iinammaanaie eB Pa dro Raghytrnduaeh ich ted LePyPysasr rrr Aryrstiti ti Ar Apr tera >