The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 20, 1930, Page 3

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— CM T.CANDDATES |= HEAR JUDGE BURR’ CITVZENSHP SPEECH Marked Preference for Baseball Shown by Youths at Fort Lincoln Camp Supreme Court Justice A. G. Burr Welivered a short address as a part of the course on “Citizenship” before 437 youths fro mthe northwest fand mid- west states at Fort Lincoln’s Citizens Military Training camp yesterday. Candidates at the camp have swung Into the serious work of the camp's training after the first few days of preliminary work in arranging the camp into companies and platoons and getting the youth stationed prop- erly, according to officers in charge. With athletic events beginning this afternono, a marked preference for baseball has been shown by the can- didates, according to Lieut. Fay Smith, athletic officer. More than 170 of 437 citizens in camp have chosen ball for their principal sport, each student being required to in athletics. Only 30 de- cided in favor of kittenball. Other sports offered at the camp found devotees in the following order: at » boxing, track, basketball, football, wrestling, tennis, volleyball, horseshoe pitching. Instruction in sports is given each Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Fri- day afternoon. Two baseball, two volleyball, and two kittenball games were on the program this afternoon between company teams. A camp track and field meet is set for Wed- nesday, July 9. ‘Tournaments for tennis singles and doubles championships will begin July 3. Citizen soldiers may swim in the Bismarck outdoor pool edch Monday and Friday from 2:30 to 3:30 o'clock. A swimming meet is set for July 11. Each youth at the camp must par- ticipate in a strength test, selecting one of the following events: shot put, grenade throw, 100 yard dash, pull ups, and hop-step-and-jump. Boxing end wrestling matches in the various classes will be staged in the evening. ‘The “Citizenship” course, including lectures on social, » and po- litical phases of life by a number of outstanding men of Bismarck and the ——— She's Got a vicinity, will be conducted periodi- Compd@hy L yesterday won the first evening parade contest and the com- pany guidon has been decorated with 8 significant ribbon. Beskos-Bittis Suits Again Put on Trial Nick Beskos and the Bittis brothers are fighting their American pool room afafirs all over again in district court. With Judge Fred Jansonius back on the bench, @ suit of Beskos against | George Bittis and another against both George and Nick Bittis were taken up in combination. . The suits are an effort on the part of Beskos to assert partnership rights in the pool hall, while the Bittis! brothers assert Beskos never was a) partner in the business. | Recently Beskos tried to lay the | basis for appointment of a receiver | for the hall by an accounting suit in district court. This move failed, as the court held he had not proved a connection sufficient to entitle him to throw the pool hall into receiver- ship. MODELS ‘POSE’ FOR JOBS BEFORE ARTIS’ Paris. — ()— Because modern art- ists paint faster, there is now a “models’ market” in Paris. Every morning hundreds of girls gather in the halls of art academies while artists survey them and choose the ones they wish. Three sittings is about the average nowadays, at $1 for three hours, where as before the war a model! hired to pose was assured of at least | @ dozen. With shorter jobs the hunt for work is keener; hence the “models’ market.” There are always plenty of models. | Some girls seek the work deliberate- ly, but many more fall into it by chance, through another. model’s sug- | gestion or an acquaintance with an artist. Not even all girls with beautiful | faces or figures are successful models. | Remaining absolutely immobile for as long as 25 minutes 1s not easy. Sweetie on Every Ship! Clara BOW “True To the Navy” A Paramount All- Talking Picture with Fredric March Harry Green Clara gives gobs lessons in love in this buoyantly gay romantic comedy! Aided and abet- ted by Fredric March, her lead- ing man of “The ‘Wild Party.” Midnight Show Tonight Special Midnight Matinee at 11:30 Tickets now on sale at the box office. PALACE THEATRE MANDAN _ —____ MANDAN ___ Tonight - Saturday 5-9 p.m. — 15c - 40c Bigger! Better! Funnier! This famous four wo be funny ALSO SOUND “~~“VALD Beh ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 1930 Black Named to Head N. D. Elks Association |rewine Dickinson, N. D., June 20.—(7)— Norman Black, publisher of the Far- go Forum, was elected president of the North Dakota State Elks associ- ation at its annual business session here Thursday. Other officers, all re- elected, are Sam Stern, Fargo, vice president; George T. Richmond, Jamestown, secretary; William Brod- erick, Williston, treasurer, and Charles Doyon, Doyon, trustee for three years. Fargo was chosen the next convention city. Heavy rains failed to dampen the enthusiasm of delegates to the con- aces who observed “Play Day” to- lay. “Dat Little Cherman Band” last night from Bismarck arrived and added considerable entertainment to the activities. A meeting of the State Sheriffs’ as- sociation, scheduled .to open Thurs- day, was postponed so that the peace officers of the state could participate in the Elks convention. MAN-WOMAN MARRIES AFTER. AFTER 29 YEARS’ MASQUERADE London.—(NEA)—For 29 years Evan Montague Brutt posed as a woman and was employed as a servant in Tisbury, Wiltshire. While in his dis- guise he became attached to Sarah Matilda Edwards, and the two went around the village as girl friends. Recently Brutt’s sex was revealed, Your Vote and Support will be Appreciated Martin Strand Candidate for Election to the office of Co. Commissioner Third District BURLEIGH COUNTY (Pol. Adv.) SMART STRAWS READY NOWSs OUR FEATURE SENNIT 95 Here is the Straw you're looking for! Every line of the brim and crown is correct for 1930, Of handsomely woven Sennit Straw, it’s light as a feather, yet shape! And.. firm enough to hold its it’s easy fitting...COOL. You'll like the hat and you'll like the price! Other Splendid Straws $1 to 5495 THE STYLE-FLEX FEATURE See the specially fine braid around the inside of the brim. It “gives” when pressure is exerted against it . . . insuring high degree of comfort and the most accurate possible fit. Store Phone: Four-Seven-Six “Now Mark BISMARCK, © DAK. vWv "store Hours: 9 tim 6; Sat. tll 9 Bismarck” and shortly after he married Miss Ed- Although the utmost secrecy the date of the wedding was maintained it leaked out and nearly the whole town was at the church during the wedding. The bride re- vealed that during the time she knew! Brutt.as:a girl chum she was not aware of his real character. Maintains Silence On Leap from Train Detroit Lakes, Minn., June 20.—(P) —Neil E. Wheeler, 37, of Minot, N. D., représentative of a Minneapolis firm, will. be discharged today from a hos- pital where he has been a patient since his leap from a moving train near Stockwood, Minn., Wednesday. Wheeler’s condition: was much im- proved and an ankle, believed broken, was only sprained. Wheeler con- tinued silent today, refusing to give @ reason for his act or to disclose his Twin City connections. His mother, Mrs. Mary Wheeler, of Minot, arrived Thursday night and fe. accompany her son to Minot to- lay. . A POUND A YEAR London.—One of the largest birth- day cakes ever cut'in London was consumed here recently when the British and Foreign Bible society cele- brated its 126th birthday. The cake weighed 126 pounds—a pound for every year—and carried 126 candles. The cake was made in the design of: a Chinese building. RUBBER SEED MEAL HELPS COWS FURNISH MORE MILK! Blacksburg, Va.—(#)— Dairy cows may eat rubber seed meal, thrive on) {it and produce more milk. | This discovery has been made j through experiments conducted by |C. W. Holdaway, professor of dairy husbandry, and Dr. W. B. Ellett, pro-/ |fessor of agricultural chemistry at! | Virginia Polytechnic Institute. | Rubber seed meal, heretofore con: jSidered @ worthless by-product from the processing of kernels of the seed of para rubber trees, contains a high percentage of protein and is available in large quantities each year. A comparison of rubber seed meal jand the old process linseed meal showed four and three-fourths per cent milk flow in favor of the former. MEANEST MEN Cleveland, O.—Two men under the; guise of mourning friends called at the home of John Bartlich to attend the wake of his wife. Bartlich recog- nized one of them as a fellow work- man. When the grieving husband told the men the body of his wife was still E-E-E-K! Bridgeton, N. J.—Sergt. Frank Ba- con was questioning 11-year-old Wal- ter Preston about the theft of coins | from gas meters. He saw a suspicious bulge in Walter’s pocket and demand- | sentatives of eight northwest states |ed that the lad show him what it was. | opposed to unification of the Northern ' Walter refused, and Sergeant Brown | Pacific and Great Northern railroads | Snatched @ can from the boy's pocket | met today and condemned the revised | Syastycroae savor eee es eek ouzens resolution which would not | jj fee with the proposed consolida- HAT out oe Ce eee the ea oe ion, r ¥ ‘AS adopted by the senate, the reso- |S el lution would have prevented the con- . PAPER FOR BLIND | solidation pending further legislation} London.—A rotary press capable of | on railroad mergers. printing Braile type, the kind by | hat the blind read, is a new inven- ion in England which promises to Philadelphia—The colleges and unl-| aid sightless persons considerably. versities of the United States are| Paper traveling from a roll attached turning out hords of morons suffering! to the machine is embossed on both | from various degrees of arrested emo- | sides simultaneously. By running their tional and intellectual development, according to Dr. Harry W. Chase, president of the University of North Carolina and president-elect of the University of Illinois. He suggests that | schools attempt to make men out) of their scholars to get away from| Northwest Solons Condemn Resolution j fingers over blind are able to read. printing Braile is the old system of Washington, June 20.—(?}—Repre- COLLEGE MORONS Learn Beauty Culture at the undertaker’s they attacked and} overpowered him and fled with $36.! | ———_— | | MOVIE ACTRESS AT 84 | London.—Possibly the oldest film} actress in the world is Horatio Nelson, | Britain’s 84-year-old screen star. Miss | Nelson has played more than 200 parts | in the movies, having played with | Poli Negri, Carl Brisson and Betty Balfour. She often is on the go from| {5 in the morning until 11 at night. their present tendency. | For the next TEN DAYS we are offering our regular $175.00 com- plete course for ABOUT ONE-HALF the regular rate at the North- west’s Finest and Best Equipped BEAUTY SCHOOL, i Enrell today. Become INDEPENDENT for life. .Catalog free. CHICAGO HAIRDRESSING ACADEMY ' | VOTE YES FOR SUNDAY MOVIES WED. JUNE 25 (Pol. Adv.) Fargo, N. Dak. We Help Yeu “Earn While You Learn.” west Prices itn 19 Years / aR ILB Tl RESo"*TU BES. low cost Trail tires Store Phone: Four-Seven-Six for 15,000 Miles LOW PRICE is just one of the good rea- sons for the national swing to Trail Blazer Tires. In addition to the savings on its very Blazer brings you PER- FORMANCE in Mileage and Skid-Proof Safety far better than you get from many which cost much more. That’s VALUE! If ever a tire had VALUE this Big, Tough,“Vitalized Rubber” Trail Blazer is that tire. Don’t take our word for it! Prove it for yourself on your car. All Sizes ... Big Savings on Trail Blazers! “Vitalized Rubber” is Tougher! “Vitalized Rubber” is pure rubber treated with “Anti-Oxidant,” a chemical discovery which doubles its life, “Anti-Oxidant” isenow used by a special process in moulding all Ward’s tire treads. Bismarck Chautauqua an Contest! ig Prizes? Can you write a good about the new Anti-Oxidant - Rivereides? Submit your ideas The 200 prizes for slogans in- clude Packard, Buick and Ford Sedans and 197 Riverside Super- ; Service Tires! In case of a tie, < equal prizes will be awarded ‘ each tying contestant. Get fall information at our store. ref iat? “Now Mark Bismarck” BISMARCK, N. DAK. - > June 24 to 28th

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