The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 7, 1929, Page 3

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HOME DEMONSTRATOR| PLANS A FULL YEAR OF WORK FOR WOMEN 55 Representatives of 12 Home- makers Clubs Hear Miss DeLong Tell Plans What members of 12 Homemakers clubs in Burleigh county will learn about the newest wrinkles in women’s clothing was revicw4d by Miss Grace DeLong, state home demonstration leader, at a meeting yesterday. Gathered in the county agent's cifice were 55 representatives of the county clubs. They heard Miss De- Long outline work for the ycar's pro- gram. Arrangements for meetings of proj- ect leaders groups at Bismarck and Wing were made. Leaders will meet at Wing September 19 at the home of Mrs. A. E. Kopplin. The Bismarck meeting will be held September 20. A meeting place has not been named. ‘Two other meetings of the leaders will be held; at Wing October 17 and November 21 and at Bismarck Octo- ber 18 and November 22. Miss DeLong left last night for Dickinson where she will conduct homemakers meetings in that vicinity. | | Beach City Council Names Two Officers | Beach, N. D., Sept. 7.—Upon the resignation of E. A. Earnest as chief | of police and waterworks superintend- | ent, the city council appointed A. ©. | Stone, for four years sheriff of Gold- | en Valley county, to the post. Mr. Earnest was then named waterworks superintendent and street commis- sioner. The two offices had been combined but members of the city, council found the duties too great for one man to handle. | School Teachers to Gather at Dickinson Dickinson, N. D., Sept. 7.— Nearly 1,000 members of the southwestern division of the State Teachers’ asso- ciation and school officers will assem- ble here for their annual meeting Oct. 10, 11 and 12, it was announced here. Sessions will be held in the State Normal building Preparations are under way and a complete program will be announced in a few weeks. H./ H. Maxwell, superintendent at New England, is president of the south- western division. Committee Is Making Plans for Homecoming Dickinson, N. D.. Sept. 7—Home- coming at the Dickinson State Nor- mal school, with a football game inst Minot as the chief attraction, i! be held here October 11 and 12, it was announced by Florence Som: under Miss Somers are E. 8. Hatch and H. J. Weinbergen of the faculty and Robert Parkins and Rose Switzer. students. Friday evening there will be a “get together” party at the school. The celebration will close with a dance Saturday night. Library Department Fixed for Children Dickinson, N. ., Sept. 7.—A chil- dren's department in the public li- brary, equipped with shelving and furniture to make a cozy ‘On school days, the new depart-| ment will be open from 3:30 5:30 9 to i | : Hu it iii 1 i i tH i i tf | I i ie [ rt i i Hae iy Hi cy » Hi i t HY Z BOBBY JONES BEATEN BY OMAHA YOUTH Bobby Jones (right in group picture), last year’s amateur champ! when Johnny Goodman, Omaha youth, won thelr first round match shown in single picture at ri Schools at Mandan v Prisoner Gets 15 Register 1,222 on | “Day Jail Sentence First Day of Term On Judge’s ‘Error’ Teachers in ‘Mandan schools were | & grected by 1.222 students when | schools opened in that city. 1 val This figure includes those aoepet| ed in grade schools, the high school the close of the first day and the! Sullivan was released from Parochial school, 400. Increase in the ja after being fined $10 for drunkennes: number of students in the city school | He still had $15 left when he departed is expected by J. C. Gould, superin- | from the station. Minot, N. D., Sept. 7.—Jack Sulll- | transient laborer, began serving ; a 15 day jail sentence in Minot after a few brief hours of liberty, because ‘and parochial school. City school! Police Magistrate Carl N. Cox ad- |rolls showed a total of 822 pupils at! mitted that he had made a mistake. Ne Assoctatea Press Photo lon, did the congratulating for once 1 up. Goodman, later beaten, is also La Moure County Paid $9.16 Per Month for @| La Moure. N. D., Sept. 7—Operation of schools in La Moure county last year cost $262,241.70 as compared with $268,676.90 for the preceding year, says the annual report of W. P. Olsm- stead, county superintendent of ‘hools. each pupil was $9.16 per month. Total enrollment throughout the county was 3.240. Total amount paid to teachers was $159,377. il S. Education of Pupils: Average cost of educating | tendent, when the harvest season comes to a close. |_ Because of crowded schoolrooms, | St. Joseph parochial school has limit- ‘ed its enrollment to the number of {children whose parents reside with the Mandan parish. Registration in the grade and high schools this year show a decrease as compared with last year, when 822 students enrolied the first day. A leading feature of Mandan's| school system is its department of agriculture where 18 freshmen ‘and | ores are in beginning classes | in vocational agriculture under Rob- ert Adams, Smith-Hughes instructor. Trips to model farms and experiment stations around Mandan will be made in connection with class work. Holden Loses Part of One Finger in Cutter Holden, of Eckelson, was brought to Jamestown Thursday night for medi- | renerabehal in Om the committee |°2! attention after he had caught his; jright hand in a corn cutter and bad- \ly lacerated two fingers. | The tip of one finger was smputat- | ed. The i immedi. jately to the Jamestown clinic, i Victim of Fall from Haystack Is Buried: Grand Forks. N. D., Sept. 7.—Fun- | i eral services for Alf Olson, aged 45, | j of 318 Walnut street, who died at a local hospital as a result of injuries sustained when he fell from a | stack on a farm near Gi Id about a week ago, will he hel Hanson-Anderson |. Rev. a ° 4 | i ah [ i i p f hi Ut i Ho & ul if fa z i all if s peste Fie hi fi : 8 5 § A few hours later, Sullivan was {duty at present. EEE Hd brought to the station again, once more intoxicated. All of his money was gone. “I made a mistake,” Judge Cox told Sullivan. “I should have fined you every cent you had and then you couldn't have got drunk again. Be- cause of this mistake I sentence you to 15 days in j Horse Kick Fatalto | Nine-Year-Old Girl | Scranton, N. D., Sept. 7.—Her sku!l crushed by the kick of a horse, Edna Kurth, 9, died in a Miles City, Mont., hospital without regaining conscious. ness. She was rushed to Miles City by train after the accident. Funeral services were conducted at Scranton. | Trinity Lutheran on Winter Service Time Time of services at the Trinity English Lutheran church of which Rev. Opie S. Rindah! is pastor, have changed from summer to winter schedule. Sunday school will be held at 9:45 a. m. morning worship at 11 and the Luther league will meet at 7:30 p. m. The Confirmation class meets every Saturday morning at 10 o'clock. Garrison Will Add Man to Police Force Garrison, N D., Sept. 7.—Recom- mendation of the civic club of this city that another policeman be added to the force and fifteen men be dep- utized as an auxiliary force wili be laid before the city councii at its next meeting. Several lawless acts com- | mitted by transient laborers was given as reason for the addition to the force. Two night patroimen are on Bartz sured club members that such protec- desired tion as the businessmen would be afforded. Enrollment at Linton Schools to Reach 400 Linton, N. D., Sept. 7.—Schools in ul £ H 2 g 3 Ft - Hi is A i ii z : Tough Sagehen Flies Through Windshield New England, N. D., Sept. 7.—After a sagehen flew through the windshield of their car and broke it to bits H. L. Johnson and family discovered the bird was too old and tough to cat. The party was returning from a trip to Hot Springs, 8. D., when the hen flew through the windshield. None of the party were cut by the flying glass. THEATRE SATURDAY 2:30 - 7:15 - 9 p.m. PLEASE COME EARLY! All Talking Comedy “Berth Marks” With Laurel and Hardy SS Starting Monday Mis golden voicc took Broadway by storm! Students Will Sell 1,000 Season Tickets To Grand Forks Men Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 7.—Plac- ing its quota at 1,000, officials at the University of North Dakota have completed plans for what they term “the most comprehensive ticket cam- ipaign” ever undertaken by the school’s athletic department. The campaign, which opens Mon- {day morning at 9 o'clock, has as its object the disposal of 1,000 scason football tickets among business men of Greater Grand Forks who last year purchased 572 such rescrvations, the ticket office announced. A committee of 19 men in Grand Forks and 4 in East Grand Forks has been selected to handle the entire canvass of the two cities. This com- mittee was selected from workers who made good records on similar solicita-| we tion last fall and from others who| 3 le 1 | i 2 a er fit expressed a willingness to help ticket | | officials stated. $27,000 Is Paid for Farm and Equipment Dickinson, N. D., Sept. 7.—Sale of ! th j miles south of Mott, including stock ; | and all equipment, by J. D. Thrasher to Capt. J. L. Sullivan of Moose Jaw, Sask., for a reported price of $27,000 be cinity in some time. Capt. Sullivan, a World war veteran, received the Vic- } toria Cross and degree of Royal Mar- | shal for his braver; PAINTING FOR HOOVER Rio De Janeiro, Sept. 7.—()-—-On! Dec. 21 next, the anniversary of the | landing of President Hoover on | Brazilian soil, a painting depicting his visit will be presented to him. The overnment has commissioned an ar- | tist. di This afternoon's regular edition of The Minot Daily News On sale each evening (after 7:05 o'clock) at the news stand of the Hotel Prince THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1929 Perplexing Problem ‘ Puzzles Poor Police J Evanston, Ill, Sept. 7.—()—The police force today grappled with the perplexing problem created by the robbery of the A. E. White home. It was obviously a question of psychology, for no ordinary burglar would do what the White's burglar did. Besides taking $150 he opened box cf crackers and built a tower with them, in the middle of the kitch- n floor. Next he got a peck of po- tatoes and arranged them symetrical- ly around the cracker castle. For a nishing touch he picked up a sct of blocks, playthings of the White's little child, and made a neat | around the cracker castle and potato pylons. | The one thing on which the sicuths | wall ere agreed today was that t very ange way for a bu act. | Shoots Deer Instead | Of Coyote, Pays Fine’ Steele, N. D. Sept. 7.—Believing hree decr were three coyotes, he said, | a section and a half of farm land 10| John Huffer, Tappen farmer, bagged | one of the animals and paid a fine of $100 and costs when he appeared | efore Justice V. A. Laney on a charge of shooting deer out of sea- is the largest transaction in this vi- | son, He was arrested by Game War- len Kinzer. The 10th is the last day of discount on Gas bills. Buying a Diamond Buy your diamonds from a Jeweler who really knows dia- monds—not from a peddier or dealer who merely sells them and doesn't really know the quality he sells. We have been selling diamonds for thirty-four years—twenty- one years in Bismarck—therefore we are experts on diamonds and buying direct from the cutters enables us to sell at the lowest prices. F. A. Knowles Jeweler “Bismarck Diamond Store Since 1907” Ask for Bids on New Jamestown Hospital | Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 7.—Adver- | tisements for bids for the erection of |@ new hospital at Jamestown have jbeen ordered published by the board { !of directors of the association spon-, soring the new structure. Foundation | walls and the basement have been completed. The site for the new building is in| the block north of Fifth street, be- | tween First and Second avenues. Bids will be opened Sept. 17 in the | office of G, R. Horton architect, and it is expected actual construction | after that date. | jat the State | | | Painting Wanted by a first-class mechanic. Rooms painted for $13.50 and up. Why caicimine when you can get |] @ good paint job. Work ple i] anteed. ee The Pilgrims Are Here! Ask your grocer. Manchester Biscuit Co. | work will begin soon itten spelling of Luverne, | DOBBS HATS Our ancestors took months to accom: plish a journey by ox-team which the air: plane covers ina few hours. The advance in the art of hat making has kept pace’ with the strides of transportation) I¢) wouldbcinterestingtocomparea Dobbs hat with the headwear of those old times.” §. E. Bergeson & Son On Broadway Opposite Postoffice The Cabrislea . Sady by Fistor with the PONTIAC: ODUCT OF GENERAL Although Pontiac value has been world-famous ever since the first Pontiac aj has remaisted for the Pontiac of them all—the srontens valueof CAR ** idea into the low-priced ficld. 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