The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 29, 1929, Page 6

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sPINEAPOLS MAN + PAYS $15 FINE FOR “& ROKLES DRIVING Tomorrow at Hearing on Drunken Driving Charge driving, was fine of “aN salesman, claimed he became be dered when he reached the tre the courthouse Saturday machine p! 2 ¢ roiled to * ¢ explained b $city and be © building. He | there wa ns of |b stop to under th Caldwell, Plasterer, Dies of Heart Ailment p, Delbe: uddealy A victim of his rooms i a pired before a do could 3 ldweil had been in poor health for several month He had been emplc here for the « last, two months at his trade on new © buildings in the city. He is a for resident of Mandan, having moved to Portland, Ore. three 10 y He leaves a widow Funeral services will be conducted tomorrow afternoon. Burial will be made in the Union cemetery. Personal and Social News of Mandan Vicinity Mr.-Mrs. Lanterman Give Bridge Dinner A basket of br onze chrysanthemums | nd tall candles in harmonizing shades were used in the table decor- ations for the dinner given last ev ning by Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Lanicr- | 4 man, Mandan, at the Hotel Prince. Covers were placed for 12. After dinner bridge was played at the Lanterman home, with score prizes going to Mr. and Mrs. Carl Pierce and Mr. and N C. F. Ellis, {| Pay Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Sylvester had as their guest over the week-end their fon Robert of eae Mont, ‘ sue ee 2 HP. ey ie at been visit- . Ing his mother in Cleveland, Ohio. for the past two weeks, has returned | to Mandan. x ke ests were entertained by | Ralph Friesz at a bridge | party Saturday evening. Score prizes | were awarded to Mrs, J. J, Kelly and | Mrs. Joe Regan. se % { Mrs. Louis Larson has returned from a several weeks visit with rela-| + tives in Chicago. She was accom- | by her daughter, Mrs. Mac ind small daughter. see Complimentary to Mrs. Eric Laven, La Crosse, Wis., Mrs. John Rovig cn- tertained Saturday afternoon. Rook | was played during the afternoon, with high score going to Mrs. Melvin ! s* *& Mrs. H. W. Schmidt was hostess at a Halloween dinner at her home Sat- | urday. There were 12 guests. includ- ing Mrs. Walter Parker, Glendive, eee | . W. White, accompanied by | 1 Haight left Mr. Hanley will = MANDAN NEWS ‘YOUTHS STEAL CAR > number |r | TO EFFECT ESCAPE | FROM REFORMATORY bu Huff Farmer, to Appear Escape Without Hats and ae: “d Wade the Heart River nCar Take Sakaria Minn “another came AES FMR INCRASH WITHHELD Two mon put oiherwi ted her aid to be from Bismi identified. v at a “stop 5 damaged ¥ officials with! two men from aid they v 2 of liquor when t cred. eons ; to Observe Roosevelt and Navy Day Are € Carried Out; Ss eele= | ap- nd his-| ed before | fer | noon y suade: on the junior hi the { Swanson, vies president of the stu dent council, With the flag at the top at the m1 z president nblage in allegiance ven ‘Theo- y of the pro- | dore Roo: | seams. ‘Station KGCU Will Be On Air November First Announcement that broadcasts 5 from station KGCU would November 1 was made this morning by H. L. Dahners, president of the! Mandan Radio corporation, owner ot | the plant Scores of applications for the po- | | sition of announcer at the station have | been received. according to Dahners. Selection will be made } shortly before the first of the month. N. R. Hood, recently named oper ator of the station, is expected to ar rive here in a few days. Plans for | broadcasting programs will be ar- | ranged upon his arrival. Home Society Named Guardian of Children Eight children of Mr. ‘Henry Sickelstiel, Hebron. and Mrs. will be committed to: the-guardianship of the , North Dakota Children’s Home so- | ciety in accordance with an order gned by District Judge H. L. Berr: The order was signed by the judg upon application by Alice B. Bailey. | juvenile commissioner for the sixth district. The mother and two of the children state school for the mentally defective at Four of the childrn will be placed in the Catholic boarding school recently were ordered to the Grafton. at Haymarsh. Fakirs are Mohammedan mendi- Mont. ‘and Mrs. Henty Altman, Car- | cants, who are held in high regard in India. Just ree {with the le 0 Pi |calv {farm. ed another large jm James Hanley, 3. and shipment of Hart Schaffner & terday | Marx suits in the new browns! >; and blues, $25, $35 to $50, with 2 pairs of trousers. Bergeson’s. THE BI SMARCK_TRIBUN TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1929 SURETY COMPANY'S | SUITFORRECOVERY OF $9,000 STARTED, McFarland Presiding Over Ses-! sion of Burleigh County District Court ought by the National Surety | % company against Earl I. Haggard et |2% al for approximately $9,000 was be- in Burleigh county district court Judge R. G. McFarland morning. ulted from a contract | rd in 1926 by the state 10 in Burleigh county, company, which had 1 bond on the completion of finished the work, It claims, failed to follow the er, Haggard assigned | ith the state highway | he surety company had ms held up and charges that the assienees have no right to the The state highway commis- pandics federal and state furids} construction. Burleigh | ‘a party in the case in funds in the ay i ard to the county evtiement. Hyland and Foster, Bismarck firm, is representing the surety compar s Simon, assistant attorney i George S. Register, ey. are representing the nd county respectively in the Attorneys for two of the in the case are Sullivan and Sullivan, Mandan, rep- resenting Sylvester and Daily, Man- ; and Allen and Engeseth, Bis- counsel for the McKenzie | h Store, McKenzie. FE. Regnicr. California, was per= | manently restrained from interfering | hoid estate on certain | 'y land being cultivated | » John Baumiller in an order made | Burleigh county chapter of the Amer- {nulment suit yeeterday, alleging that Clothing for F ¢ YOUTHFUL WIDOW OF | University _ professor. shot _ Walton mi a minute after the youth stepped in- | Clot ing Aas ) td ij j to his father-in-law's private office. Children in County | | “Hamilton is said to have told po- | lice immediately after the shooting however, that he shot to protect his family. FOREIGN MISSION CONFERENCE ENDS Asked by Red Cross An appeal for clothing for children | ef needy farmers in the Bismarck | district has been issued by Miss Mary iCashel, executive secretary of the MURDERED HUSBAND FIGHTS FOR FATHER \Texas Coed Stands by Her Father Despite the Fact He / Shot Down Her Mate and Africa Tell Thrilling T of Jungles at the time of her marriage to Goetz Oct. 18, 1918, in Jersey City, Goetz had been divorced less than a year from his former wife, Mrs. Ethel Johnson Goetz. Miss Bordoni announced late last ar she hed left her husband, charg- | ing another woman was the reason. Both have becn married before. In What Month Is Your Birthday? we: SEES HOPE 1 Washington, Oct. 29.. ern inventions are destroying Amer- ican home life an exception is seen | by Vice President Curtis. “This is | not true of rad: he said in a radio address. “It holds a unique place in that it is returning us to our fire- sides.” by Judge McFarland. Reenier put in 40 acres of crop onj rs farm last year without ion and under protest of Bau- iiler, claiming that he was an agent of the owner of the property, another | ifornia resident. Regnier was re-} ned from threshing the crop. ize McFarland took under ad pment the case brought by A. E. Nelson against Mr. and Mrs. George | in which the plaintiff seeks | and delivery of 12 cows. six | es, and one pig now en the Fred | The judge announced he will decision in the next two or | make 2 three da ‘TWO MEN ARRESTED | _ FOR STORE ROBBERY. pected of taking part | y of the Parks general | at Sterling in September have arrested for Rollin Welch, Bur- loigh county sheriff, by Harry Briggs, Jamestown chief of police, and are be- ing held at the Stutsman county city. is and Ronald to the report reaching the | ae riff's office here this morning. Their fingerprints are being com- pared to those taken at the Sterling | store after the robbery, and no def-{ se has been placed against | 5 5 John Y. egen n Funeral Held With Old-Timers ; |As His Pallbearers Funeral services for John Yegen | |were held privately at the Webb ichapel at 11 o'clock this forenoon. | The immediate family here attended lana one brother, Christian, from Bil- ; lings, was here, illness keeping other {members of the family there from attending. The pallbearers were Jacob Hoer- ner, Otto Dirlam, William Laist, Vic- |tor Moynier, W. H. Webb, and I. P. | Baker. The interment was in Fairview cemetery. 184 Hospitals and Institutions \are using | Father John’s Medicine is now used in 184 hospitals and stitutions from coast to coast in the United States and Can- ada. Proof of its merit is its record—75 years of success. i dees our ee | do -everyihing to ree i lieve you of respone } sibility and worrle 4 ; But ALL-BRAN made him wide- | Nov. 4-11. Write F. L. Watkins, \ | every meal. Far better than habit- | On your Birthday send your The children range in age from one tribute are asked cither to call 840 23-25, First Guaranty Bank building. |The drama of a youthful bride aiding may be enacted today in district/ ‘The subdistrict foreign missionary @) son-in-law. Tom Walton, Jr, in| tatk was by Dr. Joyce Edwards of the | the box at the opening of court there | Hindoo and went back into religions actress secking in Illinois courts an | 18-year-old widow, Mrs. Theresa | of the meeting. In the Monday after- , Versit: of Texas, will testify for her 2 Goetz has filed suit for divorce in! 4 who spent ten years in Umtali, South him to Hamilton's office to inform | table on missionary enterprise in In- Hamilton, a former member of the ' the thrills a missionary experiences in | PACKERS FAVOR — ate of Dakota Business College, Ben Sattler has accepted an $1800 ' D.B.C. pupil for the West Fargo BUSINESS trai ining (copy righted | oi ican Red Cross. to 15 years. Those who have clothing to con- lover the telephone or communicate ‘with the Red Cross offices, Rooms Weatherford, Tex.. Oct. 29.—(%)— in a fight to save her Pcie from oF | conviction as slayer of her husband Irene Bordoni Asks yb ted today in dls j ; | court here in the trial of R. H. Ham- conference a lethodist : For Second Divorce | itton tor the fatal shooting of his | omerence. at, SBOE tay “TN tba Chicago, Oct. 29.—\)—The Irene ! Amarillo last May. India field. He analyzed the progress Bordoni-Ray Goctz, domestic drama!, With half of the jury already injof Christianity in the land of the has moved for the moment from New | was a possibility that testimony might receding the coming of Christ. York to Chicago, with the French | be taken this afternoon. Walton's |” Rev, Walter E. Vater was in charge annulment of her marriage to the | Walton, whom he married last year | noon session addresses were delivered Broadway producer. | While both were students at the Uni- | by Rev. H. A. Musser of Philadelphia, | father. Opposed to her story will be | Africa, and by Dr. 8. D. Andrews- New York. Miss Bordoni, appearing | that of the boy's mother, who sent | Dube of Allahabad, India. A round- here in “Musicomedy,” filed the an- him of the secret wedding of the | dia and Africa followed the talks. | Young couple. In the evening Dr. Musser told of commission of appeals of the state the dense jungles of South Africa in | eal court and once a Baylor Ct ” DAKOTA” HELP A. C. Hanson is the 8th gradu- | Fargo, recently employed by Swift & Co. He is in their Scattle office. position with Cudahy at Cudahy, Wisc. Leonard Hanson is the 10th Branch of Armour & Co, Remember: D.B.C, ACTUAL —unobtainable elsewhere) means | better positions, better salaries, bet- | HE WAS LIFELESS AND DESPONDENT ter opportunities, “Follow the Suc- | Hoskins-Meyer _ ce$Stul.”” Winter term begins Home of KFYR awake and well—doctor | Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo. prescribed it \ CONSTIPATION ruins hopes, saps strength. Yet thousands of suffer- ers have found the way to relieve and prevent this disease. Read how this man rid his system of constipation. “During the three years before ALL-BRAX cured me, E experienced more embarrassing moments than I care to tell of. Being life ers, dull, logy and despondent, T could not keep my’ job. My friends didn’t want my company and I was tired of being asked “What in the world is the matter with you? “After spending much money for treat ment, I finally found a doctor who advised ime to cat ALLBNAN three times a day. did this for three months and I to be told that I looked better felt iicer sod ected etine ss Temictil wes | ALL-BRAN cvery morning and have no trou ble now whatsoever.” (Name and address upon request.) i Guard against constipation by | cating Kelloge’s ALL-BRAN. ALL- BRAN is guaranteed to prevent it— | to relieve it. Just cat two table- spoonfuls daily—chronic cases, with For Sale Cheap: Complete Meat and Grocery Store Fixtures Up-to-date sectional shelving, built in 8 foot scctions. Write Tribune in care of Ad. No. 64. forming drugs and pills. ALL-BRAN is 100% effective. Doc- | tors recommend it because it pro- | motes natural elimination. Serve it | with milk or cream. Use it in cook- ing—muffins, bread, etc. Delicious recipes on the package. a hep sell it. Restaurants, hotels, dini cars service it. Made by Kellogg in le Creek. | WANTED Old, Wild or Blemished Horses Write for rendering purposes. or phone for prices “NORTHERN” Hide & Fur Co. Phone 406 Box 265 Bismarck, North Dakota EASY to handle and control The more time you spend behind the wheel of a' Dodge Six— driving on crowded streets and busy highways— the more enthusiastic you will be over its easy handling. The roller-bearing steering guides with minimum effort. The clutch is easy-acting, so is the gear shift. Weather- proof, internal-expanding 4-wheel hydraulic brakes afford easy operation and are positively equalized. The lively motor with its 7-bearing crankshaft, Inver Strut aluminum alloy pistons and other refinements, responds instantly with @ quick surge of power. In every wey, the Dodge Six is easy to handle and control. That is why it is particularly prized by people who do a lot of driving. DODGE BROTHERS SIX We SOer STS Ss 10 oe REO @ Hern morons mooucr _M. B. GILMAN CO. _ Ramin ened hors Notable Workers Out of India! =| 2—"Cenada Dry” is his contacts with the wild ‘ives and beasts of prey. Dr. Andrews-Dube |spoke on “The Christian Church in | India and Mahatma Ghandi.” | The devotional services Monday | night were conducted by Rev. W. H. ; Farthing, Ashley, and those this | morning were led by Rev. F. L. Wat- j kins of Rural. Pastors attending included W. H. Farthing, Ashley; J. N. Snow, Mc- | Kenzie; B. 5. Locher, Napoleon; F. L. Watkins, Rural; Rev. Fred Norris, Mandan; Rev. G. Brown, Steele; Rev. Otto Kinsler, Moffit; Rev. G. Kling- ensmith, Hensler; and Rev. W. E. Vater, Bismarck. BROADCAST SCHOOLROOM Pittsburgh, Pa., Oct. 29.—()—Pub- lie school classroom work is to be broadcast via KDKA every Tuesday afternoon next month in an experi- ment to determine whether radio can become a useful adjunct to teaching. ‘The University of Pennsylvania hac in its first graduating class seven members. Just received another larg< shipment of Hart Schaffner & Marx suits in the new browns and blues, $25, $35 to $50, with 2 pairs of trousers. Bergeson’s. The reasons for its quality and deliciousness | 1—"Canada Dry” is | made from high-qual- { ity Jamaica ginger ‘and through our exclusive ‘extraction process retains all the @avor and aroma of the dinger root, made from absolutely in, blended find i baleaced | act proportions. A si | Hipp i it to reti ! i after the botth * 3—"Caneds Dry" is oe daily under | laboratory methods to a ms, its vaca Leadi ho: Leadi i it. tiers besten phe Ginger ale. 116 Second Street MELLOW as Indian summer ... refreshing air of autumn ... sparkling as sunshine—this is “Canada Dry.” You will find it the world over... New York... | London ... Paris. Countless homes throughout the United States and Canada serve it. For its marvelous flavor has won the approving nod of connoisseurs. wat it today and learn the thrill of drinking “Canadas ‘CANADA DRY’ The Champagne of Ginger Ales Autumn Clearance Sale New and Used Automobiles October 30 to Nov. 10 20% Reduction on All Cars during this sale. Large assortment of new and used cars which we must sell to reduce our stock for winter. Our loss is your gain. If you expect fall, pick one from our “Autumn Here is one of the bargains: 1926 Pontiac Coach ........$175.00 Remember this reduction is effective only dur- ing this ten-day sale, and that the earlier you come, the more bargains to choose from. Steen Marmon Co. AUTOMOBILE STORAGE Last winter a great many car own- : ers in Bismarck were unable to obtain heated storage in the garages due to lack of space. This season it will be still worse. We have just sold all of our used cars and have a limited amount of winter storage for customers avail- able. It will be snapped up this week. If you have a-car to store, phone 700. « to buy a car this Bargain Counter.” Phone 1452

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