The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 14, 1930, Page 6

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8 ~ PALL LETTER -OUTOF DOHENY CASE Defense Scores When Judge De- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. *RIDAY, MARCH 14, 1930 Se Dog Gone—to ntist clares Untrue Explana- tion Is Foreign * trial- of Edward L. Doheny tor when Justice Hitz upheld its conten- | explanation made by Albert B. Fall to the senate | oil committee as to where he received | $100,000 in 1921 could not be intro-} tion that the untrue duced against Doheny. The letter written 1923, told the committee that Fall, then secretary of the interior, had borrowed the $100,000 from Edwar: publisher of the Wash- | B. McLei ington P ceived money from Doheny or Hat F. Sinclair. as a personal loan. The defense argued that the let! sending the communication. prosecution argued sable to show that Fall was trying protect Doheny, Normal School Heads Will Oppose Peik Plan With Vigo (Continued f: m Page onc) President of the state normal school Presidents council, agreed with the Peik report that the present standard of teacher training must be raised. They warned, however, that it would be inadvisable to effect changes wit! Out the approval of the legislature, All were against the present mini mum requirement of 12 weeks of nor- mal school training to obtain a teach- The minimum stan- dard, they said, should be one year of normal school work. They favored raising this to two years as quickly ers certificate. as practicable. Opposing the suggestion by D: Peik that the 12-week summer school be eliminated in order to prevent students from beginning to teach in the fall after they graduated from high school, the normal school heads Suggested that this would be a meth- od of curcumventing the will of the 1929; legislature as expressed at the Session, Bill Was Beaten At that time a bill intended to rais: the minimum standard of _teache: training from 12 weeks to one school year was beaten. Standard of teaching efficiency. Suggestions for teachers in a one. year rural curriculum suggested in the Peik report were made by unani- mous vote of the normal school heads. ‘They opposed the idea of requiring all students to take a standard first- that it year course on the ground would be impracticable. Peik sug. gested that every student attending normal school be forced to take a course which would fit him to teach in the rural schools at the end of one year. gested, however, that students change in the law. Supplement Made In a supplementary report present- ed at the meeting today, Dr. Peik re- affirmed recommendations made in his first document. He recently had visited several state educational in- stitutions and his additional report covers observation made on these visits. Recommendations which he reaf- firmed are: “1. That for some time to come the state training of secondary teach- ers be concentrated at the state uni- versity and state agriculture college. .“2. .That there be a division of la- bor between these latter two institu- tions as to majors for secondary teachers and research. That the field of training high school teachers not be kept up among too many institutions, to provide specialization, to promote each to at- tract and hold strong teachers, appear | even more vital to me. “It will affect future standards and | future costs even more than present standards at present costs. The divi- sion of labor is possible now if will- ed; it is more difficult now than it would have been in the past. It will produce some temporary problems of personnel and other ad- justments. It can result in consider- | able present economies but perhaps / not as extensive economies as one! unacquainted with the situation; might hope for. ADMITS ROBBERY Jacksonville, Fla, Mar. 14—(7)—| Judy Jordan of Chicago, who engag- ed in a gun fight with officers at po- lice headquarters here early today and was subdued with the aid of tear gas bombs, later confessed ac- cording to authorities, that he and his companion, Jack Jackson, wound- ed two men in a robbery near Day- tona Beach last night. Upset Not Serious If Bowels Get This Help ‘When you're out-of-sorts, headachy, bilious, with coated RULED QUEEN MARIE IS WORRIED OVER \ i] ‘Rumanian Royal Youngster Re-| Apathy Regarded iniee athena” Only Obstacle in ported Engaged to Comely | Spanish Princess (Continued from page one) AMOROUS CHILDREN’S AFFAIRS (LEWIS vention Also Ask General (LEWIS RESIGNAITON | | DEMANDED BY MINERS n | Resolutions at 31st Annual Con- Court House Voting | Washington, Mar. 14—(AP)— The defense scored in the bribery in December, | ‘ILEANA STILL LOVES ‘LEX day | of Himself and Princess With Few Words | Prince of Wales Scuttled Gossip U. M. W. Election standing bonds, $10,000 worth, which the holders refuse to sell back because | they Th y") are such good investment. i |day of maturity, A one-mill levy, for | instance, | year on the total assessed yin Bur | today. Of $22,406,169 on the Property in Bur- ne of the Indianapolis, Ind., Mart 14.—(AP) le Proposed bond issue is to run|—Demands that John L. Lewis re-| 20 years and the tax levy for its pay- | Sign immediately as international ;ment will be in annual amounts suf- Leer of the United fat hie | ficie: ers of merica were contained in OF MALLE OA Sone Teen ie [TaEolntldee sean tae Thirty- would raise $21,000 each first. constitutional convention hece demands came from | The Dei A month later Doheny appeared before the committee and |about even now as to whether the tol dthem that he had sent $100,000 /Dowager Queen Marie is to see her in cash to Fall on November 30, 1921,|Younger son safely married into the could not be introduced against Do- / vi heny as he knew nothing of its con-/8002 Will be announced between tents and did not know Fall was |Young Prince Nicholas and the In- it was admis- Suggestion was; made that it would be better to edu- cate the legislature and the public to & realization of the need for a higher The normal heads said, however, that practice teaching had best be done in the second year of the stan- A dard course if possible and that it {been maintained. For many years the | Would be a physical impossibility to Provide practice teaching facilities for all students in their first year of nor- mal school work. It was further sug- be- ginning the standard two-year course be required to finish it before they would be eligible to a teacher's certi- ficate. This also would require a leigh county. This would suffice bay off the bond issue in about years, = BY MILTON BRONNER London, Mar. 14--(NEA)—In the light of various amorous scandals which have touthed the royal family of Rumania, the speculative odds are Small Cost on Farms \Payers. Here is the table: ruling house of Spain. For gossip in Ordered Nicky Home Mama Marie didn't hesitate this jtime. One naughty boy in the family was enough. So she delivered an ul- timatum to Nicky. He was to come home, and at once, and be very good, or he would meet Carol's fate of dis- inheritance. Nicky went home. Next was announced the engage- ment of Princess Ileana, fairest of all Europe's royal maidens, to Count Al- exander von Hochberg, of Germany, ay glorified commoner. But something went wrong, and the affair still is ranging between contradictions and counter-denials. * This Nicholas-Maria romance, how- ever, seems to be the real thing, and if it is it will unite two youngsters who not only are distant cousins but | who are both blood relations of King; George of England. Their mothers, Queen Marie and Queen Ena, are first | cousins of the British monarch, and| the children had English educations—{ Nicholas and Eton and the Infanta {by an English governess and frequent | trips to London. j But Maria Christina is the daugh-| ter of an ill-fated royal family on its/ Spanish side. To go no farther back} than her own grandfather—he died of tuberculosis. A posthumous child was born to his widow, so that Al- fonso XIII—itself an unlucky number | —is the only reigning monarch who has been king from the day of his! birth. On the morning Alfonso was mar- ried in Madrid to his fair-haired Eng: lish bride a bomb was tossed at their carriage. Neither was injured, but they were spattered with the blood of less fortunate victims. Ill luck pur- sued them. Their eldest son, heir to the throne, is suffering from an ill- ness about which secrecy always has Public utilities if and the building is erected—that the railroads, the power compan nd the telephone companies, Mercer Experience an Example h= ie risk involves all the experience of Mercer county. 1906 its court house burned. r. ent population of and still $15,000 was its now only 60 per cent complete as deeds and 30 per cent complete as other instruments. It is only e : Prove the titles to their property. a4 Mercer count to property. | Astronomy-Loving Farm Boy First (Continus- from page one) j ized that I had stumbled onto an im. Portant discovery. After an examina: second brother has been afflicted with deafness. Escaped the Jinx ; Were soon convinced that we wer ; ek ped sepatlets, ee oe | viewing the trans-neptunian planct. nfanta Bea’ an i Maria Christina, seem to have escaped the jinx. Both are tall, strong, fair- haired girls who excel at outdoor Sports. Maria has won minor cham- pionships at tennis, and not long ago received a prize for her dancing at a London charity ball. As is the custom with queens with Pretty marriageable daughters, Maric solemnly paraded Jleana about Europe. Rumors were as numerous| new as definite developments were scarce. The Prince of Wales scuttled some | Most interesting gossip when he called iher “a nice’ little kid.” Then her | another name was variously linked with those of Prince Amadeo, son of the Duke lof Aosta of the Italian royal house: | Archduke Albrecht, whom some art touting for the throne of Hungary, {to bachelor King Boris of Bulgaria. What the gossips did not know was! {that during a shopping trip in Paris \she met a tall, fair-haired young man who won her fancy. It was tae years {later while visiting in Munich that 4 - abe met him again, and it was ‘hen | “And Dyin the rare say When Trae eceeae cenorted to haye;gaid: to | { called them in to see it—well, you . . 14, Know how these astronomers | are. ae gira Page ap lr sont They are used to thinking in terms of to marry a royal prince, I want to| Mullion of years and millions of miles. | live in Rumania, and I would rather! THY Weren't excited. They said it | ‘Editor's Note: neptunian planet.) - * * x By CLYDE TOMBAUGH Flagstaff, Ariz, Mar. ihrough the machine. in a routine day's work. no word for it. I just didn't know what to do or think, or how to act. “Sure, I was the first to see it. but the whole Lowell staff has been working on it for a quarter of a cen- ‘tury, I was just lucky. That was all there was to it. Pennsylvania and another from |Towa.” These resolutions, mailed | iseveral days ago to the internation- lal secretary were published in pam- to 18 Besides, one-fifth of the cost of the| Seattle Mausoleum. Proposed building will fall on the} the bond issue passes A good illustration of what a fire time the county trusts to luck and maintains the pres- ent fire-trap is to be found in the tion was only one-tenth of the pres- Burleigh county cost for =| vertising and re-recording deeds and other instruments. The records are Patched up job and property owners / are constantly faced with the prob-} ability of having to go to court to/ If the Burleigh county court house should burn—and there is no disput-/ ing that it may—it is safe to say that the necessary expense of making new) records in the register of deeds office! would be six to seven times that of or in the neighborhood ; of $100,000. The record books alone will cost about $15,000. But no mat-} ter how much money might be spent. ! jthe records would never be complete and property owners would be con stantly faced with the possible neces-| “Regret I am unable to accompany sity of a court action to quiet the title tion, the senior members of the staff Following was written for the Associated Press by Clyde Tombaugh of the Lowell ob- servatory, Flagstaff, Ariz. who was the first man to see the new trans- 14.—(P)— | “How would you feel if you saw a! world giving you the high sign | from beyond the rim of tie solar sys- ;tem? That is what’ happened to mej in the dark room when I was running bunch of photo . plates “Just a strange flicker of starlight “Excited? I should say so. That is An estimate has been made, ‘phlet form and made public today, on the actual, not assessed, value’ of Bat have not yet been referred to the properties of the county, and this |e shows what a small cost the pro- | Posed building would be to the tax-/| delegate: , Values cf Amount of national president pro tem and his ter | European capitals is rife these days Property Annual Tax staff, to act as international officers ‘to the effect that an engagement $1,000 $ 60 and to send out a call for a general 1500 ‘90 jelection. The | f4nta Maria Christina. ie Hey | Seattle Pre Other queen-mothers of modern 3.000 130 epares to|Burope have been blessed with fairly 3/500 210 Funeral Services tractable offspring in matters matri- 4.000 240 i monial, But not Marie, First her res i For Earl Borland jelder son, the former Crown Prince | 5.000 300 — |Carol, accepted disinheritance rather 5.500 3.30 ‘(Continued from page one) jthan forego his attachment to a cer-| 6.000 3.60 held in the Chamber of Commerce} {tain red-headed charmer. Scarcely | 6.500 3.90 | auditorium. Formal funeral services Z'|bad talk of this died down than Nich-{ 7000 4.20 * | Will be held at the mortuary at 3! olas, also reported to be most respon- 8,000 4 80 o'clock March 22, with an American sive to feminine appeal, departed for 9.000 Ba Legion chaplain officiating. |Paris to keep rendezvous with a 10,000 6.00 At the conclusion of the service, ‘blonde. Borland’s bod: be interred in will be taken to the is| flanked by 2 milita ies | CScort, and placed aboard a tri Hatton, N. D., for burial. company the body to Hation. 3 MINNESOTA PLANES TO REPRESENT STATE St. Paul, Mar. In to| Adjutant General E. A. Walsh, to a: on to Hatton the following day, JOE CROSSON UNABLE TO ATTEND FUNERAL ‘to Oliver lelson, Ben’s brother. your father to Hatton,” jeomfort to us all. press myself to great loss is mutua Armed Boys Captured Robbing Fargo Store Fargo, N. D., Mar. 14.—(4)—Appar- ently unconcerned over what fate held in store for them, a 14-year-old Fargo boy, arrested with a 12-year- old companion Thursday night while in the act of burglarizing a Fargo im- plement firm, sat in the city jail to- day whistling “In a Prison Cell I Sit,’ while officers pondered on the best procedure for punishing the youths. They had ransacked two desks and attempted to open a safe before being ‘discovered. The boys had a loaded |38-calibre pistol with which the oldest boy said they intended to frighten | anyone who molested them. Am unable to ex- only that our Dozen Persons Hurt In Gotham Fur Fight’ New York, Mar. 14—(P)—A dozen | | Persons, both men and women, were | taken to hospitals and several others | were treated by ambulance surgeons | | after a fight between left and right wing fur workers today at 28th street and seventh avenue. | The clash occurred in front of a| ne resolution, submitted by Local | Union 5480 of Des Moines, asked | jthat after Lewis’ resignation, the delegates proceed to elect an inter- Eielson’s body Great Northern | ¥ailway station on an army caisson, ty and honorary for Ole Eiel- Son, father of the aviator, will ac. 14.—(P)—At least three planes belonging to the Minne- At that time th: " . {Sota National Guard will be dispatch- at time that county's popula fed to represent Minnesota at the |funeral at Hatton, N. D., of Carl Ben Elelson, arctic flyer who lost his life| in the north during a flight the past winter ,it was announced today by Colonel J. E. Nelson, assistant ad- jutant general, has been designated as Governor Christianson’s represent- ative at the funeral and will be a Passenger in one of the planes which will fly to Grand Forks on March 25, staying there over night and moving Hatton, N. D., Mar. 14.—(?)—Joe Crosson, former arctic associate of Carl Ben Eielson who found Ben's wrecked plane in Siberia. will be un- able to attend the funeral services in | Hatton, ar via today in a cablegram, Crosson's message said, “but it is impossible to get away at this time. Pat Reid, Mac- |Auley and Hughes are going and I j know they will take good care of him. ; We are proud of the manner in which |your father accepts his great loss and Detected New Planet ihe strain ‘of the last four ond paca His viking fortitude has been a great} jlive there than be a queen in any; might possibly be the lurking Lowell fur shop operated by Banjemin Axel, | lother country.” it further to check it with data they had been gathering so Jong. “This happened Feb. 18, and we have all been working on it ever since. j Only last night did they feel sure jenough about it to make an an- nouncement—and even yet, three might be @ mistake—but we don't think so. “You know I am not a real astron- | omér—guess you couldn't call me one at all. I'm just interested in stars and have been all my life. When I was a kid back on the farm in Kan- Sas an uncle used to tell me about the | Stars. Then I got all the books about j Stars and the skies I could find. | Made Crude Telescope “One told me how to make a tele- scope. During the long winter months when we were snowed in I monkeyed around with astronomical things. I even made 2 crude telescope, grind- ing my own lenses from directions out of this book. “I guess my kid sister sized me yp right in the high school Prophesy at Burdette, Kangas, for she had me dis- covering a new world. “One day last fall I just decided I Was going to do what I wanted to do most in the world. I had ‘always been interested in Lowell observatory at Flagstaff, I had read a lot about what they had done there. So I Just wrote to Mr. Slipher and asked ‘for ‘Lexy’ Half English “Lexy” was Count Aiexander von Hochberg. The name sounds suffi- ciently German, but he really is half English. His mother was the famed beauty, Daisy Cornwallis-West, who married the Prince of Pless. As Prin- cess Pless, she was one of the beauties of the German court and a very great favorite of ex-Kaiser Wilhelm. He befriended her while many in Pots- dam viewed her askance because she was English. Alexander was christened at the Royal Chapel in London, the god- son of King George and of the Dowager Queen Alnandra. He was sent to Christs College, Oxford Uni- versity, and later put to work in an English bank. He enjoyed consider- able social position, but little money. The Count left Bucharest and word was issued that Princess Ileana had terminated her. engagement. The other day, on @ yachting cruise, she the Dowager Queen Marie, or not she since has changed Fig GEes E i mind, hag been quoted as saying ler “is particularly wel- me because of his English Job, telling him I would do any kind of work. And they put me to work on the dome in which I later took the picture which revealed this new planet. z “I guess I'll: just keep on taking pictures of stars. That is what I like E Planet, but they would have to watch i controlled by right wing workers, | The fighting broke out when a group | of left wing furriers attempted to force their way into the establish- ment. Knives, clubs, and fists were used by memibers.of the two rival factions, A riot call brought police reserves and the detective bureau radical squad who dispersed the crowd. Sey- eral arrests were made. Mouse River Valley Oil Company Is Sold Minot, N. D., Mar. 14—(7)—Fur- chase of the Mouse River Valley Oi Company of Minot, operating stations in this city, Granville and Deering, by the Cities Services Oil company was announced here today by R. C, Mas- lowski, Grand Forks, divisional man- ager of the Cities Service company. Woodland Rites Held; St. Paul Services Set After holding’ funeral services ‘Thursday hight in Bismarck for Mrs, F. J. Woodland, 58, who died in @ log cal hospital Wednésday, the body is being taken to St. Paul today for bur- jal. Services will be held in the ‘Mandan were over Sunday guests at the M. E. halter, Rev. and Mrs. “Dog luck” Pueblo, Colo. There was danger of growl gumming up the operation. failed Hawkes Gold. canine track star of the Miami Beach, Fla., Kennel Club. For, as you see here, he had to go to the dentist to have a fang pulled. But if ie was nervous, so must have been the dentist, Dr. E. C. Stimmel of attended the ministerial meeting held at Bismarck, March 11 and 12. ‘Wm. Brown left Sunday for Fargo where he will enter the U. 8. Veterans and receive treatment. g left Tuesday for ‘Washburn where he will be maintain- er on the roads, His family will move as soon as roads are good. } Mrs. Carl Omodt and Helen spent Saturday in Bismarck. Mrs, Selness and the new baby ar- rived home Tuesday from Bismarck. Miss r the last of the week to visit her aunt, Island, N. Y., while there. end. day. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Erickson mo- tored to Driscoll with Rev. Brown, on ‘Sunday attending the church services there also calling on Mr. and Mrs. Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Armstrong of Allen township spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Foye Harris. Mr.-and Mrs. Geo. Murphy motored to Bismarck Saturday. f S. W. Burleigh By KATIE D. STEWART © Norman Stewart and Earnest Lang were over night visitors in Bismarck the first of last week. C. L. Hauser motored to Bismarck | Thursday. Dave Sullivan and Dan McLean! have left their home in the river bottoms and are staying at the J. R. | Stewart home. Ronald Nicholson is staying with his sister Anna at the Stewartsdale parsonage. Mrs, Han- Senators Refuse to Reconsider Denial of a Washington, Mar. its previous action in the existing {ariff on 0. ce Senator Bingham, but was defeated, 43 to 27. cn unstemmed and stemmed wray tobacco. * The “house ‘bill cach of these duties by 40 cents. By JOSEPHINE DIERUF back on their farm here. home, Mr. and Mrs. Mercil. dents Thursday. Portland, N. D. over the week-end. Harry Cunningham of Bismar week, birthday. which refreshments were served. Tobacco Tariff Boost 14.—(\—The senate today declined to reconsider : ; " denying the Bi house increase of 40 cents a pound in| ¥ wrapper tobac- South Soo Tuesday to Welch’s Spur. Republican, Connecticut, proposed reconsideration This left rates in the senate bill ‘of $2.10 and $2.75 a pound, respectively, increased f Steele i Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Patton have re- turned to Steele after making their home at Lamar, Mo., for the last two! years. Their intentions are to move! Floyd Murphy left Saturday for Crookston. Minn. to visit Mrs. Mur-| phy and the new boy at her parents’ | Rev. Betchel of the Florence Crit- tendon home in Fargo gave a very in- teresting talk to the high school stu- Miss Alice Knudsvig visited in Spent a few days at his home here lest | Monday evening a group of friends met and surprised A. H. Foye at his; home the occasion being his 79th A pleasant evening was| spent at whist and cribbage after! son and children are staying ‘at the Hugh McMurrich home. Mr. Hanson is staying with Mr. Cameron. Mr. Dahl is moving into the Gager house during the rising of the Missouri. Earnest Lang is working for O. T. Davenport. A. J. Stewart transacted business in Menoken last Tuesday. M. J. Deidrich was a passenger to ‘ismarck Monday returning on the The farmers having hay on the river bottoms have been very busy banking it out on higher land. A great amount of it has been sold the Sara Boyd went to Bismarck Mrs. Hanson and also met a visiting aunt, Mrs. Chas. Burton of Long Elbridg Phelps and Harold Loerch | |visited with home folks over the week- i Mrs. Sprague of Bismarck was aj Mr. and caller at the H. N. Tucker home Tues- @|ammach home were Mr. and Mrs. church Sunday morning at 10 o’clock, March 16, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Wagner spent Sunday evening at the John home. Gust Neimiller called at the John Berg home Tuesday afternoon for jax seed. Mrs. Christ Wolf called at the J. A. Berg home Thursday on business matters. ~ Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Wagner visited at the Fred Wagner home Thursday evening. Wie 4 E Nelson called at the F. G. Redington home Friday on business. | Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wagner were Wilton shoppers Saturday. { Mr. and Mrs. Christ. Wolf and Mr. Lewis Wagner were Wilton call- {ers Saturday on business matters. Mrs. John Berg called at the Ed Gessele home Wednesday evening. f Mrs.’ Fred Schuman called at the j Fred Neimiller farm Saturday on business. | ‘Turtle Lake eo ¢ By SARAH HEINLE ‘ Among those that attended the dance last Saturday at the John L. Haugen and family, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Lagge and family, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Jennings and family, Fred Brown, Dan and John Gill, Nadie Knocks, Jack and Fred Ewine, and Shearers young folks. A. H. Heinle went after a load of coal Wednesday by sleigh from Wil- ton. Virgil Lagge was a visitor at the F. E. Hall home Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. L. Haugen and fam- ily were visitors at the L, E. Hall home Tuesday evening. Miss Mary Ewine from Chicago is visiting at her parents’ home, Wm. Ewine for a few days. the Wm. Ewine home Wednesday eve- ning were Mr. and Mrs. John Ham- mach, Vernon Morris and Miss Helen Jennings. STATE Group to Consider Memorial May Be Called Together by Shafer and Hart Fargo, N. D., Mar. 14.—()—Gover- nor George F. Shafer and Harry Hart, state commander of the North Da- kota department of the American Le-.‘ gion, will be asked to name a state- wide committee to cooperate with the committee at Hatton in carry- ing out the work of establishing a memorial to Carl Ben Eielson. This action was decided upon a meeting here today of members of the Hat- ton committee and men in key cities of the state who had been appointed to aid in the undertaking. Sentiment that he had encounter- ed, W. P. Davies of Grand Forks ce- clared, was that the matter of the Eielson memorial had ail been ar-.« ranged at Hatton. He maintained that the committee “should be of such scope and include such out-; standing men that there will be no question as to the feasibility of the undertaking.” D. E. Shipley, Bismarck) declared he was convinced that a suitable me- morial should be erected at Hatton, but that if enough money was raised in the campaign, some suitable mon- ument should be erected at the state capital, Devils Lake, reported the American Legion in that city already had ap- Propriated for any memorial erected for Eielson and expressed sentiment that the memorial should be at Hat- ton, aie Bismarck. R. J. Downey, + HUGE POCKETS A spring coat shown at a recent those that were !tashion show is of beige camel'’s-hair, = We be fedag eves [belted and atthe normal’ waiains with perfectly huge patch pockets on each side, bound in brown suede. Mrs. Savaski and daughter Olga were visitors at the Wm. Ewien home Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wagner were shoppers in Turtle Lake Wednesday. Dave Keck was a caller Friday at the L. E. Hall home. past two wecks on account of the heavy snow. A. J. Stewart called at the O. G. Davenport home one day last week. Ed Becknall called at the Snyder, home Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Alex McLean and family are staying at the Don Nichol- son home for a while until the river becomes norma! again. Harold Hogue has started to school Years on account of an accident re- ceived in coasting. Vernon Gramling, John and Nor- Bismarck Tuesday. Stewart home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. 8. Hauser and Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Stewart motored to Bismarck Monday. l Wilson | By MRS. JOHN A. BERG Mr. and Mrs. Sam Berg visited at ithe Wm. Wagner home: Wednesday evening. | Emil Wagner rode to Mercer to meet Emanuel Hinsz of Martin, Monday eyening. Gust Neimiller motored to Mercer | Tuesday morning to meet his par-| Mrs. R. H. Dodds, accompanied by Mrs. Clara Dodds and Mrs. Leo Mey- ers and children, drove to Bismarck Monday. Monday evening was “Ladies Night” at the Lions club. Out of town guests jincluded Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Kadlec. Mr. Aplson, the Misses Ferguson and McRosh of Dawson and Mr. and Mrs. Parsons of Bismarck, A group of Dawson girls entertained with singing and other amusement. Mrs. Thompson of Linton is visit- ing her sister, Mrs, Selness and fam- ly. | John Ronning has purchased the W. P. Bailey residence on the north ; Side and will move in about April Ist. | The Steele firemen were hosts to |the Dawson and Tapven firemen at a card party Thursday evening. F. C. Bowermen was a passenger to| Bismarck Sunday. Miss Helen Bovcher. nurse at St. Alexius hosnital Bismarck spent Sun- dav at her home here. : The Lions club presented “The Crime Wave,” a mystery plav in four acts at the Ideal Theatre Thursday and Friday. Mrs. O. B. English and daughter Lucille were callers in Bismarck Sat- urday. Attorney Ruble of Driscoll was a caller in Steele Friday. Reuben Stromberg was a business visitor in Bismarck Saturday. ents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Neimiller, ere called by telegram to Ed- { N. to the bedside of their | w who passed away. They {attended the funeral there last week and returned Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Gust Neimiller and children and Otto Wolf spent Mon- day at the John Berg home. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Wagner visit- ed at the Edward Gessele home Tues- jday, Mr. Gessele is very ill. Mrs. Christ Neimiller and Mrs. Guset Neimiller spent Friday with Mrs. J. J. Wagner quilting. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Wagner vis- ited at the Lewis Wagner home Fri- day evening, If you want a good reading paper subscribe for the Bismarck Tribune. Rev. C. R. Strutz of Bismarck will conduct services at the Evangelical olds Sete Johnny Smith of the Agricultural |college at Fargo spent the week-end at the home of H. N. Tucker. .Christy Matheis was a caller in Jamestown Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Adelbert Taylor of Bismarck svent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Art Yanken and Mr. and Mrs. Allen Taylor. Miss Esther Peterson of Jamestown. spent the week-end with relatives and friends in Steele. Miss Leona Markert who is teach- ing in Crown Hill township spent the week-end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Matheis. Mrs. Jack Olson came up from Jamestown Friday and visited until Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. LaZarfe. Mr. and Mrs. Eric Wallin motored to Bismarck day. y. Fred Wigton and son Louis motored to Bismarck Saturday. . Mr. and Mrs. i ag rie en accom- panied by. Mrs. Paul Gress spent Saturday in Bis- marck. Ray Smith and Arthur Keubker of Mrs, David Ritchie, Mrs. J. J. Hoch- Herbert Brown Church of the Redeemer Saturday afternoon and burial will take place in Elmhurst cemetery. BRUMBAUGH IS DEAD Pinehurst, N. C., Mar. 14.—()— Former Governor Martin G. Brum- a baugh of Pennsylvania suffered a heart attack on the golf links here today, and dicd o few minutes later. again after being absent since New |t the Emanuel Kech home Friday. Dan McLean called at the John | Wilton shoppers Saturday. blouse is a nice foil for a dark green @ | Printed silk suit. Berl Shearer was an over night; guest at the Wm. Ewine home Thurs- | day. Mrs. Henry Wagner was visiting at the John Fished home Friday, the day | was spent in sewing a quilt. | Edwin Heinle was a business caller | at the Fred Klein home Friday. | Anna Stacia Brezden called on | Anna Ewine Wednesday evening. Jake Schatz was a business caller Mrs. Senstrom is at the Bismarck | hospital for an operation. ‘Dan and John Gill were visitors at | man Stewart were business callers in| the Dave Keck home Sunday. Joe Hofsup and son James were | TWO GREENS A chartreuse flat crepe and jersey CULL, BAKKEN, BRADY and JANZ Certified Public Accountants INCOME TAX SPECIALISTS Dabl Bldg. Bismarck Phone 359 Rooms 7-8, Hoskins-Meyer Bldg as for flavor; that its ingredients were of the purest and finest; that it came from a model sanitary bakery. Ask Your Grocer for Purity Bread Saturday and St. Patrick’s Day Specials PIES Cream, Date, r A Apricot, .B: Pre, pri seo Pastry erry, Lemon, Fancy ind Chocolate Eclaires, Cream Puffs, leon Bars, Surprises, w Rolls TRY OUR PATTI SHELLS ROLLS Napkin Rolls, Tea Rolls, Vienna Rolls, Parker House Roll: , Pineapple Rolls, Butter Rolls, Cinnamon Rolls, 4 Pecan Rolls and Coffee Party Pastries Our Specialty Turnovers, Na’ Lady Fingers and Marshmallo: ORDERS RABLY SEE PURITY BAKERY 314 Main Ave. these Progress through Summer, Watkins, . DR. J. 0. THORESON Osteopathic Physician Announces the opening of his oe for the practice ot Osteopat Formerly connected with the Osteopathic Clinic of Hansen, Bayer & Thoreson, Fargo, N. Dak. “DAKOTAN” GETS $25,000 POSITION The Burroughs Adding Machine Co. veceitly advanced two gradu-” ates of Dzkota Business College, Fargo, to important posts. The, minagership of the metropolitan district, New York City, brings a salary of $25,000 a year to W. A. McIntyre, G. P. Sullivan is new | branch manager at Sioux City, Iowa. ACTUAL BUSINESS training (copyrighted-=2t D. B. C. only) is the entering wedge to big jobs like “Follow the Successful’? with Spring Classes Apr.1-7. Quick uate at busy season. FOR CONSTIPATION i smaller dases SCIENTIFIC. Telephone 804 White, Rye, Nut Raisin Rye, French, Vienna and Pullman Blueberry, Butterscotch, Pumpkin and Raisin. jp Cookies a erry ‘Ss, le » Almond cate and Stuffed Cookies Cakes, OUR WINDOW DISPLAY Phone 1043 = avaible WIDEEELSN, “(COMMITTEE PLANNED i

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