The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 16, 1929, Page 3

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NEW PERRY FUNERAL HOME IS ADORNED IN LIVING ATMOSPHERE Public Is Invited to View Place Saturday and Sunday; Is of Simple Beauty Lyceum Course Ends i ‘opened sas oan t Players lwo-day engagemen' at. the state normal school here Thursday, presenting the popular comedy, “Mice. and Men,” before a good-sized audience. They will pre- sent:“A Scrap of Paper” tonight. The Coffee-Miller players are the final number on the normal school lyceum course, and have made several VATER FINDS A PALL The new Perry funeral home, on Fifth street near Broadway, has been completed and fitted up and tomorrow and Sunday it will be open for the public to drop in and look it over. It is among the out- standing mortuary chapels in the state. Outside of Fargo, Mr. Perry says, there is nothing to compare to it in size and arrangements and in subdued homelike atmosphere. The interior has been constructed and decorated to give it the air of living apartments. ‘ Architect Van Horn designed a classic entrance with slender Greek columns under an arched. canopy through which the office of the home is entered. This is a room 12 by 25 fect and adjoining it on the south side is a reception room with gas} fireplace and book closets all light-4 by ornamental electrical lamps and furnished with cozy upi u chairs and a couch, where one can rest seated or lying down. It also, with the 6ffice, can be added to the chapel on occasions when a_ large gathering is to be handled, for the home has been designed to accom: modate from a few persons up t several hundred. The reception room is 13 by 25 feet. The chapel is the largest room in the place, covering 25 by 54 feet of floor space. Here the classic de- sign is seen in beautiful simplicity In the rear of this room of piain, cream-colored walls with a slight bronzed tint is an arched chancel flanked to the sides with small offset spaces for choir and minister. Back of it is the family room, and behind that are the oper- ating room and garage. The chapel is lighted by concealed lights which can be regulated to several shades of brillianey or dimness. are ornamented in window designs also of classic simplicity. The arched woodwork of the chancel is of ivory whiteness, broken with a few ap- propriate Greck designs in orna- mentation. A silver bronzed catafalque with hollow interior from which lights shed a mellow glow through stained glass sides, and moving on wheels, has been added to the equipment and is to be used in the chancel. In thi: and in a lantern electric light over the entrance two touches of antique art are given to the home. Art linoleum of inlaid stone de- sign covers all the floors and dead- ens the footfalls. This is another touch of medieval tone. Five radiators of design in sym- pathy with the general simple or- namentation of the place have been installed for the days when wintry winds and snows and chill hover on the outside. ~ A plain large apartment under the funeral floor of the home is to be the display room. It is 25 by 65 feet in dimensions and well plumbed. is a store room. A broad polished to represent wal- nut leads down to these rooms. What woodwork there is in the reception room and office likewise is stained walnut color. Fronting the strect is a large or- namental window with side panels, which has not yet been completed i ing its plate glass. The home was built by John _L. Larson as general contractor. The electric lighting work was done by the Melville Electric shop, the plumbing by Frank G. Grambs, the decorating by H. H. Engen and the plastering by G. F. Pelke. The home will be open tomorrow and all day Sunday to the public, personal announcement from Mr. Perry to that effect being contained in the Tribune last evening. BECKER WILL PLEAD The walls emy, OVER ECONOMIC LIFE OF-OLD HOME LAND Bismarck Methodist Pastor Is Back From 2-Months Tour of English Cities The new home reclaimed Rev. Ws ter E. Vater from the old Wednesda: ‘ight, when the pastor of the McCabe Methodist church returned from his !two-months visit to England. The two months were crowded with visits to his mother, his sisters and other kin, and with sightseeing in the historic places of which London is the hub, extending into Cornwall. As he returned on the Leviathan, on which boat he had gone over after leaving here June 6, his last im- Pressive sight was a gigantic distant mass in the air near Newfoundland, ith two airplanes hovering near. He | saw the Graf Zeppelin on the return flight to Friedrichshafen to begin the aerial circumnavigation of the globe. ‘The Leviathan docked in New York August 12. Mr. Vater spent eight days in Lon- don, as a starter, after the Leviathan landed him at Southampton. He vis- ited the ambassadorial St. James court, home of the prince of Wales, viewed the interior of the chapel royal where for 400 years the kings and queens of England have been mar- ried and where many historical relics are accumulated, spent hours in West- minster abbey and old St. Paul's, the houses of parliament, the , the London zoo, a jeter, Plymouth and Cornwall. His | mother is a resident of Exeter, while sisters dwell in London and Plymouth. ‘Mrs. Vater’s folks live in Truro, Corn- wall. Hayle, Fowey, and St. Anstell mouth, Peryn and other towns along the Cornish coast formed part of his itinerary. While in West Ealing he met friends and ‘relatives of Thomas Harrington, Bismarck. In Plymouth Mr. Vater attended the annual conference of the Wesleyan Methodist church. There he met the great leaders of the denomination, as Gypsy Smith. Dunsdale Young and others, and he officiated at the sacra- ment of the Stonehouse services. Kept Traveling {_ In his English comings and goings jhe wandered through the north country, up and down some of the famous rivers and into the watering towns of the English coast. He was kept busy traveling by buses, boats and rail. So occupied was Mr. Vater with re- newal of the memories of his carly life in England and with visiting kin that he found no time to cross over to Ireland or France or to run up into Scotland for any new stories in thriftiness. A Mr. Vater said he found life in England pinched economical! GUILTY 10 ROBBERY |= Wife of Wounded Man Has Pleaded Innocence to the Charge; Trial Thursday brought into district court today to Pend eulllg (0 A.chasne Ot. Rape rome ry. Two of Becker's companions, Roy ind Do! ceiving stolen money. been cet for next Thursday. IVETERANOF CUSTER At Dickinson see ae, . |field and Yellowstone park as two (noted for its pottery clays), Fal- | DAYS HERE ON TRI TOINDIANOUNTRY S. H. Anderson Pauses on Park | Tour to Revisit Site of Fort | Abraham Lincoln . Ps | Like a figure stepping out of the Pages of the romance of the Wild! West, S. H. Anderson, 78, of Emily, Minnesota, the other day revisited | the scenes of his service under Gen-! eral Custer at Fort Abraham Lin-{ coln, back in the 70’s. Accompanied by his son, A. Frank Anderson, com- missioner of Crow Wing county, and his grandson, Lloyd Anderson, the veteran of the Indian days paused in| going through here and asked Ole Engebretson, of the Capital garage, | to direct him to some old-timer who could get him to Fort Abraham Lin- | coln’s site.. Engebretson turned the | Andersons over to W. A. Falconer | and the party went down to the! Heart river hil ‘ Moved by emotion, Anderson stood with tears in his eyes and viewed | the sweeping bottoms of the souri which he had not seen since | back in the latter 70's. | “I never though@ I'd ever get back here,” he said. . While they viewed the scene, An- derson pointed out spots that linger- in his memory with the incidents {of his army life despite a gap of 56 years. At one place he told of a battle between Sioux and Custer’s Ree scouts, when the Sioux succecd- ed in running off a lot of army mules the Rees had in charge. | Anderson enlisted in 1873 with Custer at Yankton and was assigned to the wagon train. He came to Fort Rice and served there for some time, then he was detailed to Fort Abraham Lincoln. ' When Custer began the survey of 8 trail to the Yellowstone, Anderson | accompanied the survey escort, un- der Lieutenant DeRudio. He re- calls Sutler Baliran and Dr. Hom- ‘singer, the veterinarian, who were; killed at the Buffalo rapids in the Yellowstone, east of Miles y about 15 miles, by hostile Indians, while camping at a spring. Hl After returning from the survey | Anderson took the river steam-| = Mary Lowrie and left for Yank- | on. : | The present trip has Custer battle. | Genuine Aspirin Bévee ASPIRIN is like an old friend, tried and true. There can never be a satisfactory substi- tute for either one. Bayer Aspirin is genuine. It is the accepted anti- ote for pain. Its relief may always relied on, whether used for the ional headache, to head-off a cold, or for the more serious aches and pains from neuralgia, neuritis, rheumatism or other ailments. It’s lof its destinati |will-return cast by way of Glacicr park, The Andersons STORAGE FACILITIES LACK IS GREATEST MENACE 10 FARMER ‘Alexander Legge Says Problem | Now Is to Find Some Way of Handling Grain St. Paul, Aug. 16—(AP)—Immediate correction of an acute shortage grain storage facilities which he termed the greatest menace to the American farmer is the most impor- tant problem confronting the federal farm loan board, Alexander Legge, chairman of the board, declared to- day. . Legge came to St. Paul on personal business which he hopes to consummate quickly in order to give SARGON PROVED REAL BLESSING “T feel just like a new woman since taking Sargon and Sargon Soft Mass Pills and it is certainly wonderful to be well and strong again. “I had been in a dreadfully run- down condition for the past three years. I used to have _ splitting headaches and sometimes would get so weak and dizzy I'd have to stop work. My food never agreed with me, no mat- ter how careful I was. I sufered ‘so from constipa- tion I'd have to take some laxa- tive almost every night. “What a blessing it was for me that I found Sargon! My stomach never gives me the least bit of trouble now and my appetite is wonderful. I never have those awful headaches or dizzy spells any more and I’m stronger than I've been in years. The pills rid me of constipation’ entirely without any bad after effects at all. I only hope that my experience will persuade others to try Sargon, be- cause I know it will help them if they suffer like I did.”"—Mrs. Anna Erick- son, 74 South 13th St., Minneapolis. Burt Finney, agent ‘THE BEST COOKS INSIST ON PABST . all his time to farm relief activities. {He will return to Washington to- night. “Right now,” Mr. Legge said, “the {most important angle to this farm [relief proposition is the finding of {some means of keeping grain in transit or to find a place of storage. Modern methods have supplied means for the farmer to ship grain almost jimmediately after it’ is cut. {mot be shipped at the same time, hence the necessity of storage facili- ties.” Every member of the federal board, the chaftman said, is working assid- uously with the problems that con- jfront agriculture. He added that {President Hoover appeared well sat- isfied with the work already accom- Plished by the board. All can- | Temperature Spreads From 38 to 95 Here And to 108 at Pierre A record range of temperature for the season was made here between | Wednesday and Thursday afternoon, the weather bureau reports. Wednesday morning's lowest tem-| perature here was 38. Thursday a jernoon this reached 95. | “Thursday's temperatures were even higher than this in other localities, | Napoleon showed 103 and Pierre, S. D., went to 108. Last year Scotland Yard identified | 17,427 suspected persons by finger- | prints. Nearly 430,000 fingerprints are | filed at the Yard. BISMARCK GROCERY CO. DISTRIBUTOR BISMARCK, N. DAK. FREE 1 can Homa Malt Syrup for every 13 Homa Labels. From Your Grocer Bertsch’s Grocery 520 Broadway Carnation Milk, 3 cans for . Powdered Sugar, 3 lbs. for Primrose Tea, 13 Ib. pkg. . Specials for Saturday Waldorf Toilet Paper, 3 for . Swansdown Cake Flour, per pkg. .... Sugar, 100 Ib. sacks, Saturday ...... Breadspread, regular 25c seller, ...... Minneopa Jelly Powder, 3 pkgs. for .... Fresh Fruits and Vegetables in season Phone 903 Used Car Bargains 1927 Oakland coach, completely reconditioned, good as new, sales price $495.00. 1925 Willys Knight sedan, very good condition, sales price $385.00. 1926 Ford coupe, a bargain at cash, sales price of $145.00. 1928 Chrysler. coupe, 1924 Ford sedan, 1925 Master Buick coach, 1925 Olds sedan, and others, all at bargain prices. ‘We are reducing our used car stock in preparation for fall trade, \and we offer you an opportunity of buying a good used car at prices you will not see again this year. STEEN MARMON CO. Phone 1452 enjoy In fullest, measure CALIFORNIA'S Glorious Summer Days Cool Enchanting Nights Phone 279 Dick’s SAVE ON EVERY ORDER Pineapple «=~ 29¢ Sardines 3 Quarter Oil, 5 Cans 2ic Catsup, Heinz, Large Bottle . Soup, Campbell’s Assorted, 3 cans. 29c 29c 39c ra fine quality , 3 cans 34c Fruit, Nectar Zeivfs, Rez. flavors .eseee.., LOC flavors .. All I. G. A. Specials Here 10 Bars Peas - Corn 33¢ Swansdown Cake Flour, per pkg... . Kellogg's All Bran 2 pkgs., large.... Crackers, 2 lb. box Graham or Prem. Oranges Regular 25c Seller 59c Extra Special 3 Doz. 7) UG4YL(Dy», YllUl"” ZZ Zo Shady coolness---glistening white cleanliness---all merchandise within easy reach and plainly priced. Your shopping becomes effortless at any 1.G.A. Store. => = = 2 = NYS SNAIL = = 2 Se. KW SS SALAD MUSTARD Adds zest to meals, 24¢ Add @ Bit to Meat Ralle—Spread Lightly om Brotied Z ‘fteak Before Servings Calumet, Baking Pow 16-02. Tin 28c APPicOts Fire esi Tin. larg 32c Per Apricot and Deticious Apricot Marchmaitow Whip er for ~-Beday” Soap Flakes |g, i=: Fancy, Delicious with Toast or Muffins, 2-lb. 5S-oz. jar......... Toilet Soap [6) 3 =... 22c White Milled, Pure, Lasts Longer Quick or Regular, Large Pkg. TOILET PAPER Force. © Rois.. SHE Cake F Airy Feiry or Pillabury’s, Large 126c A Vermicelli, Spagherti er Neodles Malted Millic St <~"-38¢ 16-es. cam.......

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