The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 11, 1929, Page 2

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va fe ¢ Se E 1 a@@ez @se@ usean2 723% bare sose e 3 2 - Base ecaes wey ge 4 E _Sen4urnertons wee oe. ane ~ GRADUATES OF 185 ci 4 Number in North Central Asso- INSTITUTIONS CAN PASS INTO HIGHER) ciation Surpasses Those of Neighbor States SECT SCHOOLS INCLUDED; rae \ Many Raised to Highest Classi-! fication During Year; Spe- cial State Aid Given With 185 high schools accredited | this year, North Dakota's educational | system wins additional prestig: compared with its neighboring sta’ and others throughout the union. | The significance of accrediting 4s | that graduates from any of these | schools are accepted for entrance to any of the institutions of higher learning within the statc. | An analysis of the 185 reveals four first-class state agricultural high schools—Beach, Grafton, La Moure and Velva—two first-class county high schools—Park River and Mad- dock—and 94 first-class high schools. Seventy-two of these schools are members of the North Central asso- Ciation of colleges and secondary schoals, which is the largest and most | Progressive accrediting organization | of its kind in the United States. It) is interesting to note that Minnesota, | ‘with three times the population of our state, has only 100 North Central as- | seclation schools. South Dakota with | @pproximately the same population | has 67, and Montana, with a slightly less population, has 41. Forty-nine schools are accredited as fecond-class high schools and 36 a: third-class. Por the school year 1928-29, the | high school at Linton and Sanborn were raised from second to first-class ‘and the State Teachers’ College high school at Minot was accredited as dirat-class. High schools at Columbus, Flasher, Oberon, Parshall, Powers Lake, Re- gent and the Lutheran Bible school , Grand Forks, were accredit- ed for the first time, receiving from third to second-class. Other schools in this class are the parochial schools at Jamestown, Willow City and Grand Forks and the Lutheran school at Of the 36 third class high schools, Braddock, Carson, and Tolley were new last year. In atate aid to high state agricultural will cach receive the county agricultural $5000 each, the first-class $584 cach, the second-class $365 each, the third- class $219 cach. Ten high schools that charge over the legal rate for high school tuition are not allowed state aid under the law. The legal tuition rate is $1.50 a week or $54 far the entire term. The majority of these schools some do not throw their doors apen until the final date for opening, which is Sep- | tember 16. bills at midnight has given Kohler of Wisconsin a » as the point was raised, did jay end at midnight or another begin? 4 Weather Re Gav. ture at 7 a. m. iterda: North Dakota Comes t schools the | ca 0929 sha senvae INS 0G UF Far OFF. ° “—then you chop it up real finc, twenty minutes.” ROSEN OFFICER OF |had made, he said, the |sanitation acute. The omes, stores and shops, f | Bismarck Man Named to Na- AT THE MOVIES tional Committee; Funds for | * aAcAte Aue Ga Palestine Relief Sought | ACE THEATRE, 1p. Alexander Resen, Bismarck, cepted membership on the nationa! committee af the Palestine Emergency fund, an organization formed 1: to go full speed into verse out new dance steps. Holy Land. The honorary chairmen of the fund | are: Nathan Straus, Felix M. War-! burg, Louis Marshall, Col. Herbert H Lehman and Samucl Untermyer, all of New York, and Julius Rosenwald, Chicago. No goal has been set for this fund, but at the first mecting of its exccu-| tive committee Sept. 1, it was decided | lorc, but it was shortly to send $50,000 a day five days in the | week, so long as the need for relict exists and the funds available permit. The first remittance of $50,000 was made in advance of the first meeting land since the day after Labor Day $50,000 has been going forward dai A central relief committce {already been organized in Jerusal {under the leadership of Col. Fredo | H. Kisch, a member of the Jew Agency Executive, and relicf work gun. David A. Brawn, who was drafted a+ jthe head of the Palestine Emergency Pund, has won international fame as ® leader of philanthropic effort. H is national chairman of thz United Jewish Campaign, chairman of th Board of the China Famine Fund, tional. Palace iiaphone and coming to tl theatre, Mandan, tor; CAPITOL THEATRE human car, but which was r “Mother's Boy,” starring at the Capitol theatre tonight. sound engineer, add onion juice and Iet it simmer for problem of | leadership of Frank Walbert. | looting of ! the burning} with Scoutmaster Robert Byrn:. ge numbers of farms, had ac- of io | cording to advices received from Jeru-|one new troop this winter, but th2; | salem, reduccd many to absolute pov- | Discovery that nearly all gypsy| and George F. Bird, of Bismarck, and songs and dances contained elther ob-|H. K. Jensen and Dr. R. E. Percy, of jectionable words, ideas or motions forced First National's staff of writers | _ 4 campo: sition to rewrite them and to figure |™ade by the scout executive to dis- | Gypsy life is not conducted along|@nd those desiring t- become cu- ‘modern lines of propriety, and some of this freedom is inevitably reflected in their folk songs and stories. In the Vitaphone version of “The Squall,” | famous stage play filmed by First Na- and Thursday and Friday nights, use) yonn H. Worst, former president of is made of a great amount of Sys! | the North Dakota Agricultural college, that the most of it had to be toned 5 down radically before it could be useu. | Fairview. Mont.. is to be the prinel A flickering spotlight which pro- duczd a hissing noise inaudible to the 5| with thunderous and disastrous effect | by a microphone, forced the retak- ng cf an important scene in the Pathe all dialogue melody praduction, si Morton Downey, which will be seen and heard Morton Downey, the Broadway ten- who has the leading featured role in the production, was singing a pop- ular air, when V. 8. Ashdown, the rushed from his sound-proof van in which the R. C. A. BISMARCK SCOUTS ‘TOOPENACTIVINES. “AND ADD NEW TROOP First Meeting of Scoutmaster | Association Held at High School to Lay Plans | Bismarck Scoutmasters’ association held its first regular meeting of the | school year Monday night at the high | | school. Plans for the fall program and | othere business were discussed. The meeting was under the direction of ae president, Wesley Sherwin. The associa.ion agreed to mect monthly j during the winter. | All of Bismarck's scout troops are | <cheduled to open their activities this | week. Troops 2 and 3 of the Meth- odist church will mect with sheir | -|scoutmasters, Wesley Sherwin and Will; Smith. The: two © oop: are the lars- est in Bismarck. | Bischof and Ruell Reif. Christ D-izer. | the former scoutmaster. has resigned | to enter the university this fall. | Troop 5 of the Lutheran church wiil | meet with Waldo Ellickson and A. C. ;Van yk. | ‘Tre<p 6 of the Presbyterian church | jis ta meet with Scoutmaster I"elley Simonson. 7 and 8 of St. Mary's school ‘are to meet with Scoutmasters Clay- ton Finlayson and Carl Maassen. Troop 9, American Legion troop, has. ‘been active during the summer, id will met with Scoutmaster K2 --":- wicz. Troop 10, Lions club troop, has beea meeting the past few weeks under the | Troop 11, Elks troop, is to 4 Thore is a probability of organizin, Scoutmasters’ association agreed first to fill the quotas of their troops before organ’:ing any new troops. The area council executive board is scheduled to meet tonight to discuss plans for th: winter. The executive board consists of President W. °.. Nuessle, Father John A. H. Slag. od | < Mandan. rvey of the public schools of .| Bismarck and Mandan is now being cover the number of boys of scout age rolled in scout troops. Former College Prexy To Speak at Watford | Watford City, N. D., Sept. 11—Dr. and now engaged in farming near held here on September 21. Dr. Worst ‘accepted an invitation extended by Con 8ax, president of the local Com- munity club. J. P. Christensen and Charles Lock compose a committee in charge of arrangements for the event. Clay County’s Oldest School to Be Memorial Fargo. N. D., Sept. 11—Clay coun- ty’s first rural , believed jSchool age, who had been o Fore in Number of THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1929 Te /1A TA S, ELEANOR THIS HAS HAPPENED Molly Burnham, ch wealthy has suggested 3 engage- The fuer approval is ment. on wide bad oi tty, be the widowed husha: dearest friend. Melly ny in love with Bob. liste dough, aad the aaly way, ughter, way, apparently, that she beep the child is tp marry the father. cb, to prove how ruthless he might be, has already catledg at Molly's flat with a policeman, day, when they may discuss matters amicably. Then she proposes the trial _en HY haptics with the stipula- tion that the experiment shall be kept seceet until such time as they may dccide to marry. She suggests a per- to demas curesoder of Uisie Bits who ver with| her. After the fracas has subsided, | days, aren't you? Molly asks Boh to return the next| INING LENT EARLY Bhi rad it was printed, Red tele- “They tefl me you've a verse in Vanity Fair. How long since you've been writing poetry?” “Qh, it was only a little thing,” she explained. “I tried to do it like Dor- othy Parker. The idea was cute, but it wasn’t mine. It was Bob's. He says we have 50 million arithmetical ancestors. Sort of breath-taking, isn’t it? Imagine taking after 50 million People!” “You're seeing a lot of Newton these “Well, you've deserted me,” she bantered, “and I crave attention.” “You turned me down,” he re- minded her. “But, just to show there’s no hard feelings, I'm going to tell you something. Jack Wells is getting in town tonight. He ducked the report- | iod of three months as the probable {time required to ascertain the prac- ticability of marriage. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XLIV trial engagement. And he began, immediately, being very nice indeed. Molly had spoken of a painting she had seen and loved in Florence. As though he were a genii, and waved a magic sceptre, Bob procured a very fair copy. It was La Maddalena by Carlo Dolcl. The usual conceptions of Magda- lene, as Molly had seen them in var- ious galleries, were of older women, with tragic faces. But Carlo Dolci had painted a young girl, of high bad, and yas sorry. She was a beautiful, in- ense child. Her eyes were dark and passionate, and her lips were full, and fashioned for kissing. There was a holy light in her face, and it had been transfigured by a great love. Such a girl might have lived in any age. And in any town. Molly thought of her as a girl of the centuries. wanted to procure a copy ever since she saw the original. She had | ‘ ers in New York, and he's kept out of ht since he returned from Europe. was a story that he'd taken an apartment in Greenwich Village, but nobody could locate him. Anyhow the office had @ tip this afternoon. He has a reservation on the Mer- Eventually Bob had agreed to the) chant’s.” Molly’s heart was beating madly. “My goadness, Red, what are you telling me for? He's not coming to see me!” “I don't know about that. Anyhow, here's the dope. I'm supposed to meet the train, and get an exclusive inter- vigw. Statement about Mrs. Bulwer- Baton, and all that rot. If you say the word, I'll steer Wells up to your Thought maybe you'd like to like me gnd Wells ground.” “Sh!” she cautigned. “Don’t talk like that over the phone, Red. You shouldn't say mean things about Bob. Honestly BN aaa Wells? Shall I bring him around?” Molly knew nothing at all about paintings. She had seen only two in her life that she would have liked Correggio’s Virgin Adoring the Baby. Now Bob had found the Magdalene she coveted the most hy manag of Ma- donnas. He thought he delighted. turned face. And, him, because he had brought her expected happiness. un- Peps and peanuts, because she said she liked them. And he took her to all sorts of dirty places to cat. Molly knew soiled tableclath could ruin a for him. And that arty to have been built in 1875, is to stand as ® memorial to the ‘There was to have been an auction | smelied slightly \° sale lagt Saturday to sell the old log|en where the guests sat about a long his pet abomination. she liked poking about inns that once Inc., and chairman of the Board of | recording instrument is installed with | building, but during last week mem-|table, and ate from common dishes. the Broadway National Bank & Trus‘ | the stentorian demand to stop shoot- | bers of the school board relented. In-| They went to a French place, where ny. ling. Producer Robert T. Kane and |stead, they decided to donate it to| napkins were never ysed. And to an The appeal which was broadcast by | Director Barker, alarmed, demanded |Moland township for use 9s 9 town| Armenian cafe, where the chef wore a Mr. Brawn to every Jewish community | to know what had happened. Mean-/hall. Annual town meetings and| dirty apron and waited on table. And, in the United States and Canada io| while the motors opsrating the cam- | community will be held in| all the time, Molly knew that Bob over 100,000 “keymen” of the United | eras were halted. the , which is located on | would have sold afl Bohemia for fresh Jewish Campaign, the United Pales-| “There's a light flickering some- | site to the new and modern al service. tine Appeal, . the ~Women’s| where and its thunderous noise is} school which supplanted it this fall. Zionjst ation of America; the | drowning aut all other sounds,” said He hated But he bought sea- heads of every Jewish National organ- | Ashdown. N. D. FIRM JN MINNESOTA san. tickets for the Braves, because j ization, their constituent societies, the) An investigation was ordered and| St. Paul, Sept. 11—(4—The Malme | Molly was a baseball fan, and a presidents of synagogues and temples, | every light inspected by the electri-| Electric and company filed] weakness for Hank . called for immediate relief action. cians. On the staging gbove, a soll- | copies of North Dakota articles of in-| “You're too goad, Bob!” she pro- It pointed out that because of the! tary light flickered, but apparently corporation with Secretary of State|tested. “We're always doing the Arab riots thousands of Jews had been | without creating the slightest sound. i teday with an authorized I like. It's time you took me rendered homeless and were threat-| “That's the boy,” said Ashdown. The | ca stack of $25,000, of which $10,- | to something intellectual. How about ened with hunger and discase. The j light was repaircd and the shooting It be used in Minnesota. Elmer|an art exhibit, or a musicale? You destruction of several of the hospitals! rcsumed. The delay cost Pathe sev-|K. Malme, Moorhead, Minn., is the | must be bored to death with my low- maintained in Palestine by Hadassah | cral hundred dollars. agent for Minnesota. brow entertainment.” ! sista ang tea oh jor took her to 9 mavie. “The trouble is,” she told herself, “he's too nice. He's letting me walk i over him. No et could gq = despises. fcagres, pty dy the way he makes believe he's having a good ie." And then it was she thought of O. Henry's pgecd that’s the “Poor Bob. I suj 8 way I was with see its probably always that way when there are two People, and one is ever so much more in love than the other. The ane who wants terribly to be loved tries top hard to please, to please. It never ys.” Peau, since pity is akin to love, Molly was beginning to love Bob a little. It sorry for hen. eis pathetic attempts sorry for him to sftegtion made her al- Particularly to own. The first was! consented to a La Maddalena. And the other was | tacit condition for her, and he had not forgotten that | order to receive Bob was proving a rather pathetic | do, really, only you mustn't. lover. Like O. Henry's waitress who /| are other itasons. longed for romance, he tried top hard|them now. The operat to please. He brought Molly lolli-|tell you. Anyhow it's Molly hesitated. It would not, knew, be quite fair to Bob. promised to play the game. trial that hardi rules. It was lly the banish cven an unofficial an old nthe Particularly two whe where a/ friends, and the affair would un- copy might be obtained. A modern | doubtedly result in embarrassing com- reproduction. Molly was touched and | plications. “No,” she said. “Please don’t. It’s She hung her lovely Magdalene |awful sweet of you, Red. But—well, I where the light played on her up-|never told you before—but Jack because Bob had|turned me down flat, just before he given her the heautifyl thing, she | went to Italy. Oh, dear, it's awful to felt—almost—as though she could love | talk like this. The operators I know they Besides—no, don't. I don't want you to. That is, I 5 9 [ a z g sGtee i a i TeHees rf E i i. i i fi Se { Fag i i ame i = é 4 i fi: ¢ : i i % i i 5 3 a ; i : i i Hi E : s : i t i i k i Hy k a sf i 8 [ na li Ra i ia F z ai fal get ‘F f E E E a is Py ik ii Come in the morning, if you'd like.” “Oh, let me come now!” se But Molly was firm. She had a | Premonition that Bob had been drink- |ing. Knowing how insanely jealous he was, she felt that it would be fool- | ish to precipitate a scene. But, when she had disconnected, she reproached herself because she had not let Jack come, and now it was tao late. She would wait until 10 o'clock. If Bob did not come then, she would telephone the hotels, and locate Jack. Or perhaps Red Flynn would cali, and let her know where she might reach him. Dear Red! It was like him to try to patch up things. ‘When the servants had gone to bed, she went to the kitchen, and iooked in the refrigerator and the pantry. She would prepare supper herself for Jack if he came. she wanted to cook dinner. That was the night Dopey Dan shot her, when she was on her way home from the florist’s. Lots of water had flowed whole life. How nice it was, getting things ready for Jack! They were going to have steak, she remembered, and mushrooms—and, of course, she ‘was to cook them herself. Now she had a woman to cook her food, and @ man to serve it. Almost anybody would think that would make life Pleasanter. But it didn't. “I shan't tell Jack I've a butler,” she decided. “It would simply annoy him.” But she had better tell him, she de- cided, about Bob. Better tell him right straight off. Bob was being a Perfectly ideal fiance. While he played the game, she must. Besides, it was much safer to tell the truth. +». Goodness, next time she saw Jack, rs ‘a Bob would probably be mar- She covered her face with her hands, and began, quite suddenly, to up-keep cost. manufacturing low price, Phaeton, $460 Sport Coupe, with She remembered | for nearly a decade, the day of Ruth Wood's funeral, when | Sunday. under the bridges since then. That} day was the turning point in her; Accredited High Schools «| cry. The door bell rang, and still she cried. Then she remembered thaj gone to bed. She must presentable. She daubed her face with powder, and looked at herself in the glass, Her nose was red and swollen, and her eyes were putted. think ae bea a thought, “he'! ink I’ve m Cl because I was worried about him.” Dedication Rites for Velva Church Are Held Velva, N. D., Sept. 11.—Dedication of the remodeled Oak Valley Luther- an church of Velva, of which the Rev. L. T. Reishus has been pastor », took place here » The Rey. David Stoeve, president of the North Dakota district of the Lutheran church, was the principal speaker. The first resident pastor was Rev. T. S. Reishus, father of ent pastor, who served 1894. In spite of many hardships, served a mission field extending Burlington to Rugby. Services held at farm homes and in houses until the first church was in Velva in 1900, Other pastors who have served are: E. J. Strom, 1805-1807; T. H. Tonne- son, 1897-1907; O. J. Akre, 1907-1913; P. O. Bruland, 1914-1918. The building committee in charge of the remodeling was comprised of T. Welo, Hans Arneson, G. N. Leste- berg and the Rev. L. T. Reishus. PAPER IN MAKING’ A conservative estimate of the pres- ent volume of standing timber on the national forests of Alaska is 78,500,- 000,000 board feet, of which 74 per cent is western hemlock and 20 per The new Ford « Tudor Sedan is a "525 [F. O. B. Detroit, Set Pamcchaetts You save many dollars in repair bills when you drive the new Ford THE quality that has been built into the new Ford is reflected in its law You'll save many dollags in repair built to endure—to stand up under thousands of miles of steady running. Come in and let us tell you of the enable the Ford Motor Company to sell such a really fine car at such a Business Coupe, $525 Fardor Sedan, $623 (Alt prices f. 9, b+ Detroit, plus cherge fer freight ond delivery. cent Sitka spruce, both good news- Paper pulp woods, ? , Bumpers ale « methods that Tudor Sedan, $523 Compe, $380 rumble seat, 43590 ”

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