The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 16, 1930, Page 5

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cnet setae \ Social Mrs. Harriet F. Smith, Dickin- ‘son, to Lead Comrt unity Singing at Session Bismarck clubwomen who will serve on the various committees for the an- nual convention of the North Dakota Federation of Women's clubs to be held here September 15-19, have been named, and extensive preparations for the meeting are under way, ac- cording to Mrs. John Burke, who is in charge of general arrangements for the session. Mrs. Burke has chos- en Mrs. C. L. Young as vice chair- man. The personnel of the various com- mittees were announced by the com- mittee chairmen at a luncheon con- ference Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Burke. He of each group pre- sented their plans to Mrs. A. E. Jones, Lisbon, state president, and to Mrs. John Knauf, Jamestown, Mrs. F. L. Conklin, Bismarck, and Mrs. James H. Cooper, Courtenay, eighth district President, who compose the program committee. : Clubs of the eighth district, which includes the counties of Burleigh, Mc- Lean, Sheridan, Kidder, Stutsman, and Logan, are hostesses for the con- vention. J Committees are: Finance, Mrs. G. F. Dullam, assisted by Mrs. R. C. Hanson, Streeter, eighth district trea- surer; housing, Mrs. W. E. Perry, Mrs.. B. O. Ward, Mrs, J. P. Wagner, Mrs. R. H. Waldschmidt, Mrs. John Lar- son; information, Mrs. H. F. O'Hare. Mrs. Obert Olson, Mrs. J. C. Taylor; Press, Mrs. F. R. Smyth; transporta. tion, Mrs. Leonard Larson, Mrs. W. Mrs, T. R. Atkinson, Mrs. G. M. Con- stans; music, Mrs. J. P. French, Mrs. A. J. Arnot; decorations, Mrs. Burt Finney, Mrs. Gordon Cox, Mrs. S. W. Corwin; badges, Mrs. F. E. Diehl, Mrs. J. C. Oberg, Mrs. H. E. Shearn, and Mrs. R. E. Wenzel; ushers and pages, Mrs. E. B. Gorman, Mrs. A Y. Hag- lund and Mrs. R. G. Wilde. Mrs, P, J. Meyer heads the feder- atic dinner committee, and will be assisted by the decorations committee, Mrs, William Harris, Mrs. A. P. Len- hart, Mrs. L. V. Miller, and Mrs. Waldschmidt. Mrs. J. K. Blunt is chairman for the play-day activities which will take up the last day of the meeting. Mrs, Harriet Fuller Smith, Dickin- £12, will serve as director of music for the convention, and will lead the community singing, Mrs. Burke an- nounced today. ** * Mrs. T. O. Oien and Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Barlow, Minneapolis, who have been the guests of Mrs. Oien’s broth- er-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Dodds, 908 Eighth street, for sev- eral days, left yesterday for their homes. Mrs. Olen and Mrs. Barlow were complimented at several infor- mal parties during their stay, among tiem’ one given Wednesday evening by Mrs. Cerf Nelson, 916 Eighth street. © s* * Mr. and Mrs. William C. Lewis, Hutchinson, Kansas, left this morn- ing for their home after a several days’ visit at the home of Mr. Lewis’ brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Lewis, 408 Tenth street. Mr. ett, formerly with the local Armour ameries company, is now connected with Armour branch at Hee aay) * Fred Jones, who has spent the last week in Bismarck visiting his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Jones, 519 First street, will leave Sunday for Milwaukee, Wis., where he is em- ployed. * * * Mrs. E, House arrived last eve- ning from Grand Forks to visit over the week-end with her daughter, Miss Helen House. While here Mrs. House is @ guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Tavis, 517 Mandan street. is * Rev. and Mrs. L. E. Dickinson, Fairmount, N. D., and Miss Alzina Dickinson, Venice Center, N. Y., are here for a short visit with Mrs. Dick- inson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Houser, 418 West Rosser avenue. * * * Neil York and Frank Smith will leave Sunday morning by car for a tour of the Black Hfils and Yellow- stone park. They plan to be away about two weeks. * * * Mrs. A. L. Overbee and two chil- dren, 614 Second street, returned to Bismarck yesterday after a short visit at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. J Moe, Valley City. ** * Miss Myrna Woodward will leave Sunday for her home in Minneapolis after spending a week here as the guest of her cousin, Miss Mary Cram. see Mrs. A. W. Cook and daughters Grace and Nana and son David Cook, 423 Fifth street, left today by car for Devils Lake, where Mrs. Cook and INNEY’S jr hats all- Phne 9 Committees for Convention of Women’s Clubs Here September 15-19 Announced Miss Nana will visit over Sunday with friends. Miss Grace Cook, with her brother, will motor to Grand Forks Sunday, and Miss Cook will remain for a week's visit. She will be brides- maid at the wedding of Miss Marie Elvick, Grand Forks, and Dr. Hal- stead Murray, Chicago, which will take place in Grand Forks August 21, and later will spend a week in Win- nipeg. Mr. Cook will return to Bis- marck the first part of the week. * Olson-Hindemith Vows Are Spoken at Service The marriage of Mrs. Martha Olson, Driscoll, and Theodore Hindemith, Bismarck, was solemnized Monday afternoon at the home of Rev. J. V. Richert, pastor of the Zion Lutheran church, who officiated at the service. Miss Theresa umm, and Oscar Hindemith, brother of the bridegroom, were the attendants. The bride wore an ensemble of green georgette, with accessories in @ beige shade, and Miss Mumm wore. @ frock of orchid flat crepe. Mr. and Mrs, Hindemith are taking @ wedding trip to McLaughlin, 8. D., and will reside here on their return. Mr. Hindemith is employéd at the French and Welch Hardware store. se * Party Compliments Bismarck Visitors Mrs. E. House, Grand Forks, and Miss Anne Edinger, Chicago, who are visiting relatives in Bismarck, were guests of honor at a bridge party given last-evening by Mrs. Merton J. Orr, and Mrs. M. J. Ratzlaff at the Orr home, 1021 Fifth street. There were guests for four tables, and score prizes were awarded Miss Helen House and Dave Wells. Favors were presented the honor’ guests. Bouquets of sweet peas and garden flowers were used in the decorations, Out-of-town guests included be- sides Mrs. House and Miss Edinger, Mrs. Jack Moe, Oak Park, Ill, and Miss Ruth Staley, Fairmont, W. Va. ** * Jack Cowan, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Cowan, 306 Avenue B, has been selected as cadet officer in the grade of second Meutenant for the 1930 C. M. T. camp at Fort Snelling, Minn., by Lieutenant Colonel Bernard Lontz, Third Infantry. Lieut. Cowan will have almost entire command of the second platoon of “B” company, and he will be under the supervision of officers of the regular army and re- serve corps. He was chosen for the Post because of his outstanding abil- ity as @ soldier and leader of men. * * * Miss Thelma E. Quast and Delmar L, Hildebrand, both of Bismarck, were married this morning at the home of Judge Anton Beer, who read the serv- ice. Miss Jeanette Hildebrand, sister of the bridegroom, and Clement Schantz were t'-2 attendants. 1 OK Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sipple, Aber- deen, former residents of Bismarck, are here for an extended visit. ba 2 - | City-County Briefs ——_—_—______.____» Joseph Devine, commissioner of im- migration, will leave cn Monday for Eldon, Iowa, to spend a day or two at the agricultural fair being held there. Mr. Devine sent a North Da- kota agricultural exhibit to the fair. F. E. McCurdy, Bismarck attcrney, is attending the State Bar associa‘icn meeting in Degils Lake. Judge Thomas Pugh, Dickinson, is @ visitor in Bismarck today. Gunder Olson, Fargo, is trausecting business in the city today. Miss M. Kallberg, Fargo, has come to Bismarck to become mar.ger of the Ohm Dress shop. Miss Kallberg was formerly with the Stevenson store in Fargo. WATER LINE BEING BUILT ACROSS RIVER Will Provide All- Year - Service for Great Plains Experi- ment Station Construction of a water main across the Heart river to provide all-year service to the Northern Great Plains Experiment station has been begun by the city water department. - Five men are at work changing the Pipe-line across the river from an/| tana. overhead to an underground affair. The job wiil cost between $500 and $600, Mayor C. D. Cooley said today. Heretofore, the experiment station has had city water service only about six months a year. The overhead pipe freezes each winter and service has been discontinued before freezing weather to prevent bursting the pipe. The new arrangement will operate as well in winter as in the summer time. Find Victims Slain By Persons Unknown Stillwater, Minn. Aug. 16.—7)— ‘Three gangsters massacred near Wild- wood Wednesday night, came to their deaths at the hands of persons un- known, a coroner's jury decided at an inquest here today. Dr. R. J. Josewski, Washington county coroner, presiding, and P. Milton Lindbloom, Washington coun- ty attorney who conducted the ques- tioning, apparently made no effort to delve deeply into the killings, being satisfied merely to establish the fact the men had been murdered. Old-time dance at Glen-Echo tonight. | Dance (“Fashion Plaque This double-brimmed heat of starched white handkerchief linen is bound in blue linen, MANDAN NEWS PAUL FERDERER DIES AS RESULT OF OLD ACCIDENT Had Been Paralyzed for Last| Eight Years as Result of Service to City Paul Ferderer, 50, died Friday after- noon of injuries received eight years ago while fighting a fire as a member of the Mandan fire department. Be- sides his wife, he leaves 10 children. Fererer fell from a ladder while fighting a minor blaze and was para- lyzed. He had not been well since that time and for several years had been an invalid. Death was due to en- cephalitis, or sleeping sickness, be- lieved to have been caused by the condition resulting from the injury. Ferderer’s injury was received be- fore the local department was pro- tected by state workmen's compensa- tion insurance and he never received the benefits of that act. The 10 living children of the Fer- derer family are Chris and John, both of Racme, Wis,; Mrs. Ed Mason, Ra- cine; Mrs. Ted Lintz, Lincoln, Neb.; and Rose, Jacob, Michael, Perpetua, Eva and Pauline, living at home. The dead man also leaves seven brothers, six of whom will act as pall- bearers at the funeral. The brothers are Jacob, John K., Ed, Alexander, Andrew, Christ and Joe Ferderer, all living in Mandan. A sister also lives here. | Mr. Ferderer was born in Russia jand came to Mandan with other mem- bers of his family in 1907, He had lived here since. Puneral services will be held at St. Joseph Catholic church at 9 o'clock Monday morning. Interment will be in the Catholic cemetery. ONE-TIME LOCAL I P. F. Kearney, Who Practiced | Here and at Glen Ullin, | Dies In California Information regarding the death at | San Francisco on August 11 of Dr. P. F. Kearney, once a practitioner in | Bismarck and Glen Ullin, was re- ceived today by the Bismarck Trib- } une. Dr. Kearney was connected with the Quain and Ramstad clinic here for about a year and lived four years at Glen Ullin before moving to Great Falls, Mont. ‘Dr. Kearney was born at Medford, Minn. January Sth, 1878. He was graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1904 and spent one year interne at the Saint Barnebas hos- Mitel in Minneapolis. It was there that he met Mildred Kissack, a grad- uate nurse, and in 1906 they were married. Dr. Kearney was associated for a year or more in the clinic with Drs. Quain and Ramstad at Bismarck, North Dakota. He then established a practice at Glen Ullin, North Dakota. His prac- tice grew so rapidly that he built a private hospital which was in charge of his wife. They soon had more med- ical practice than they could take care of and Dr. Benson became an as- sociate physician. After four years at Glen Ullin, they sought a larger field and located at Great Falls, Mon- . Here Dr. Kearney soon built up a large practice and he with three others formed the Great Falls Clinic. An enormous practice in medicine and surgery was established, but after 12 years Dr. Kearney, as a result of overwork, broke in health and sold his interest in the clinic and went toi California for his health. He located | and with regaining health started to practice his pro- fession again. Here in four years he developed another clinic with three other doctors and several nurses in the association. Here again Dr. Kear- ney utterly collapsed in health and again sold out his interests and ceased practice entirely. Since then he has been fighting the battle to live. morning August 11 he ate breakfast with his family, said he had @ good night's rest, answered his phone, and almost immediately com- Plained of being dizzy. He lay down and in a few minutes lapsed into un- consciousness from which he did not rally. aa He gave his money freely to churches, Boy Scouts and other worthy enterprises. He was a member of the Hayward Presbyterian church. Dr. Kearney leaves his wife and two sons, Francis and Sandborn, now stu- dents in the University of California Medical School. DOCTOR SUCCUMBS CROWDS AT FUNERAL OF SLAIN GANGSTER’ Underworld Characters of St. Paul Gather for Rites for | Napoleon—155 acres rye, 16 bushels. Wabek—100 acres ‘wheat, grading No. 5. Makota—60 acres wheat, 19 bushels; 65 acres, 8. 4 Plaza—80 acres rye, 20 bushels; 60 acres rye, 00 acres, 13; 50 acres, 11. Sanish—60 acres wheat, 6 bushels; several small fields, 40 to 80 acres, 3 to 9 bushels, testing 53 to 55 pounds. Baldwin—40 acres/wheat, 11 bush- jels; 30 acres flax, 4. Stein, Murder Victim St. Paul, Aug. 16.—(7)—Twin Cities | Gangland prepared today to attend in @ body the funeral Sunday of Sam/ Stein, Minneapolis gangster mas-| sacred with two of his friends on a) Washington county road tliree nights | ag fe sure and be at the funeral | Sunday,” was the word sent out through the underworld last night. Night clubs, speakeasies and pool rooms got the message. The funeral | was to be conducted at noon at the} home of his father, | While an inquest at Stillwater | brought @ verdict that the men were slain by “John Doe, identity un- | known,” the state bureau of criminal apprehension was still engaged in running down tips that promised to Give clues to the case. Chief among these tips was a long distance tele- | Phone call to Chicago informing gangland there of the killing before it was reported to authorities here. The phone call, police have reason to believe, was put through to Chicago | from St. Paul or. White Bear within | an hour of the shooting which is be- eved to have occurred about 9:30 p. m. The bodies, however, were not found by General W. F, Rhinow’s men. until 11:00 p. m. By that time news of the shooting ‘was said to be common knowledge in the Chicago underworld. Bearing out this development is the fact that the Associated Press office in Chicago was tipped off to the shooting before the news was carried aver the wire from St. Paul. By establishing the time of that call, and the place where it was made, Police hope to get a line on the killers, For they believe that it was the men who did the job that reported to their allies in Chicago, The call is reported to have been made to a man in the district once under the sway of George “Bugs” Moran. - As the investigation continued earlier reports that the three slain gangsters had been identified as part of the Willmar bank bandit mob were substantiated. Einar Brogan, assist- | ant cashier of the bank, identified a picture of Coleman as being that of one of the men who participated in the $142,000 robbery July 15. Several eye-witnesses also identified pictures of Stein, as the man who handled the machine gun during the robbery. One theory was that the slayings Tesulted from a disagreement between members of the gang over disposal of the $100,000 worth of bonds taken as part of the Willmar loot. Disappearance of a fourth man identified as having been connected with three slain gangsters added an- other perplexing question to those al- ready confronting investigators. This man had been missing from usual haunts since Wednesday night but he | Was believed seen in a nearby town after the slayin; ‘BARLEY RUNS AS HIGH ‘AS 42 BU. ALONG $00 | | Flax as Low as 3 and § Bu. to Acre; Wheat Goes 5 to 23 and Rye 12 to 19 Wheat yields along the Soo Line, as reported by station agents, range from 5 to 23 bushels to the acre. Rye has been running from 12 to 19 bushels, barley 15 t6 42, and flax 3 to 5. The latest reports received by the lo- cal officers are: Fullerton—100 acres barley, 15 bush- els; 29 acres flax, 5 bushels; 40 acres durum wheat, ro bushels; 180 acres durum, 7; 160°acres durum, 13; 140 acres durum, 14; barley averaging 15, wheat 14, and rye 16 buskels to the acre. Kulm — 117 acres durum, 20; 51 acres, 22; 90 acres, 21, Lehr—116 acres rye, 19 bushels. Danzig—100 acres wheat, 14 bushels; 100 acres, 9. j Venturia—80 acres rye, 12 bushels; 50 acres rye, 17; 40 acres barley, 18; 200 acres wheat, 10; 160 acres wheat, 5; 55 acres wheat, 12; 80 acres wheat, 5; 120 acres wheat, 14; 7 acres, 16. | Underwood — 200 acres wheat, 8) bushels; 90 acres, 20; 140 acres, 7. Kief—35 acres barley, 42 bushels; 50) acres wheat, 23. Konigsberg — 70 acres wheat, 16 bushels; 27 acres flax, 3. Ruso—50 acres wheat, 8 bushels; 80 acres, 7; 110 acres, 10; 80 acres rye, 16. HEAR THE FULL GOSPEL PREACHED IN 1TS. FULLNESS LARGE ORCHESTRA LIVELY SINGING e Corner Eleventh Street and Rosser 17th. CONVERTED LAWYER EVANGELIST WM. F. A. GIERKE Of Los Angeles, California, at the GOSPEL TABERNACLE ‘You Are Welcome. MARVIN C. MILLER, Pastor Coleharbor — 90 acres barley, 26 | bushels. Merricourt — 50 acres barley, 25 fe} bushels, Kief—30 acres rye, 20 bushels. Pollock—100 acres wheat, 12 bushels. Wilton—80 acres rye, 7 bushels. Ransom—80 acres barley, 40 bush- els; 100 acres durum, 20; 70 acres oats, 50. Ashley—100 acres wheat, 12; 25 acres, 10; 20 acres, 18, weight 56 to 59 Pounds; 32 acres durum, 16% bushels, weight 61 pounds; 20 acres flax, 6. NEW ENGLAND 1S HIT BY CLOUDBURST Tobacco Crop Ruined and Total Losses Will Run Into Mil- lions of Dollars Boston, Aug. 16—(7)—A great lightning swept down upon Connec- ticut Valley cities and towns in south- western Massachusetts and central Connecticut today causing destruction of property and crops estimated in the millions. In the city of Worcester, alone, which_bore the brunt of the storm, Kintyre—80 acres wheat, 10 bushels. i cloudburst, accompanied by hail and | > preliminary estimates held the dam- age to be in excess of a million dollars. In Westfield, Mass., the ripening to- bacco crop suffered the worst dam- age in 50 years. In some places in the Westfie'? district the crop was estimated as a total loss. Thompsonville, Conn., reported a heavy loss to its tobacco crop. Three men working in a tobacco field in Windsor, Conn., were: killed and a fourth badly injured by light- ning when the tempest swung into that section. Mercantile establishments in the business section of Worcester were in- undated with a tremendous loss to stocks while in the streets of the city havoc reigned. Automobiles were up- set and women and children were swept from their feet by the violence of the flood which roared down the streets. Some power and telephone lines were out of commission and street Cars were motionless in several inches of water. The flood swept into manholes with such violence that | their coyers were forced off and water rushed from them four and five feet | into the air. One and a half inches of rain fell in 40 minutes and it was not for more than an hour after the rain had sub- sided that the city had resumed an appearance of normal activity. Lightning struck several places in the center of the city, destroyed a barn in Auburn and caused a fire in the West Boylston substantion of the New England Power company. Westfield tobacco area was the Amer- ican Sumatra Tobacco corporation whose plantation lies toward South- wick. The company’s 40 acres was re- Ported totally ruined. TREE SITTERS QUIT | Kewanee, Ill, Aug. 16.—(4)—Disil- lusionment came at last to Jack Bren- nan, Anton Mikenas and Bernard Johnson. They descended today from their perch in a tree after 498 hours lof sitting. “We weren't going to get anything out of it,” they explained. “It wasn’t worth it.” Peshawar Situation Is Becoming Worse Bombay, India, Aug. 16.—(?)—Brit- ish troops were hurric.. northward to- day toward Peshawar, northwest fron- tier province, to deal with a situation which was described officially as “of considerable gravity and danger.” Martial law, invoked yesterday, was in full force in the city and surround- ing territory. While the number of hostile tribes- men afield at this time was not large it was very difficult to engage them, because of the naturc of the terrain and the extreme mobility of the raiders, During the past few days the raid- ers have invested parts of Peshawar, forced their way into the supply depot and done considerable damage. Considerable uneasiness has been aroused by admissions in official an- nouncements at Simla, Indian sum- mer capital, that a serious situation Fiseg on the Indian northwest fron- tier. There is a fairly general expecta- ee THE WEEK NIGHTS AT 1:45 SUNDAYS AT 3:00 AND 7:30 P. M. Ave., Beginning Sunday, August One of the heaviest losers in the} THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, AUGUST 16, 1930 tion here that a frontier war on ajhavoc therein. Sidney Franklin di-|man and his band wi large scale will develo? as a result of | rected the play, written by Frederick efforts to crush the Afridi and other | Lonsdale, author of “The Last of Mrs, marauding tribesmen who recently | Cheyney.” The cast is a notable one, including Basil Rathbone, stage and screen have threatened Peshawar. BISMARCK GRA (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, Aug. 1 1 dark northern ij 1 northern ..e 66 1 amber durum . 60 1 mixed durum 1 red durum 1 flax No. 0, 17 oii 1 62 GRAIN REVIEW Minneapolis, Aug. 16.—(AP—U. 8. A.)—The wheat market was un- quring the week ending Friday. Hedging pressure covering the move- ment of the domestic spring wheat crop together with a start of hedging sales from the Canadian movement and an official estimate indicating a net gain of about 14,000,0 in the total domestic crop pared wit hthe July 1 figures. the principal weakness influen: fluctuations in futures with a fairly steady tone prevailing. Based on test weight, 58 to 59 pound No. 1 dark northern could be quoted at 2-3c over the September price: 59 to 60 pound, 4c over. and 60 to 61 pound, 5c over. September declined 6%c for the week closing Friday at 90c. Durum futures followed the decline of other wheat. No. 2 and 2 lurum were quoted within a rai 2c under to 10c over Duluth ber price, with an occasional fancy milling car going *at 11-12c over. Duluth Septemb: ney rosen types bringing 3c-4c 0° “A seve Oats lost ground early and showed a net loss for the week. September declined 1%c closing Friday at 37%c i No. 3 whites on spot at 36%- Te. 8 46-50c, Flax again fluctuated within a wide ze but showed a downward trend most of the week. September declined 18%c, closing Friday at 2.05%. No. 1 seed on spot was September price to 2c over. . FATHER DIES Dr. F. B. Strauss left this morning for Frankford, Mich., where he was summoned by the death of Mrs. Strauss’ father, Edward Ball, who passed away last night. Dr. Strauss will be joined at Spicer, Minn., by Mrs. Strauss and their sons and daughter, who will accompany him to -Frankford. Funeral services will be held Tuesday in Frankford. ee eT aeReeN | AT THE MOVIES | [BSckcliieroretieic thine CAPITOL THEATRE “The Lady of Scandal,” based on High Road,” is Metro-Goldwyn-May- er’s new feature coming Monday to the Capitol theatre. Featuring Ruth Chatterton, and with a notable cast which includes two players from the it is a brilliant comedy romance of modern society and show life. Miss Chatterton plays an actress thrust through a betrothal into the midst of London society, to work TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR SALE—General marck Tribune. FOR RENT—August 20th a strictly modern 6 room house, hardwood floors, hot water. Frigi- daire and electric stove. Call at 931 Eighth street. FOR SALE—Three piece walnut bed room suite, also dining room table Call at 931 Eighth street. _——_— ee FOR SALE: Modern Bungalow. Terms given, If interested, call H. A. THOMPSON 87 Frederick Lonsdale’s stage hit, “The original London stage presentation, | merchandise and machinery business in good country town. Price reasonable. Write Ad. No. 90, in care of the Bis- | oak and/ and chairs. In excellent condition. | player, as leading man, Ralph Forbes, Herbert Bunston, Nance O'Neil, Cyril Chadwick, Moon Carroll, Bolder and other notables. Rathbone appeared in the film version of “The -56| Last of Mrs, Cheyney” and also re- cently in “The Bishop Murder Case.” Miss Chatterton came to the fore in “Madame X.” Sidney Franklin directed the production. One of the spectacular -65| highlights is the theatre sequence in which Miss Chatterton sings dances with a chorus of “English Her song, “Say It With settled and inclined toward weakness | a Smile,” was composed by Jack! King, Johnnies.” with lyrics by Elsie Janis. PARAMOUNT THEATRE A cast of the greatest comedy stars 00 bushels | from both the stage and screen ap- com- | pear in the hilarious comedy sketches were | of “King of Jazz,” the Universal sup- The cash market generally followed | eT-extravaganza starring Paul White- of Life, Love and Laughter! | | | | “KING John Boles The First National Bank BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA The Pioneer Bank ESTABLISHED 1879 As a result of our experience through the past five decades we have built up a financial structure with capital, earnings and, reserves of over 450,000.00, and total resources of over $4,000,000. Half a Century in Bismarck Affiliated with the First Bank Stock Corporation of Minneapolis. Home of Paramount Pictures LAST TIMES TODAY in ‘LOVE AMONG THE MILLIONAIRES’ Stewart Irwin _ And a supporting cast Of Screen, Stage and Radio Fpvorites new and many New York stage hits, including Bs Marie” and others. Grace Hayes is one of the most popular “personality” singers in the country, and Jeanie Lang is known as “Amer- ica’s sweetheart of the Air” because of her appealing numbers on national radio hookups. Mat. Daily 2:30 10e and 35c Evenings 7 - © ‘YSe and 50c The “It” Girl CLARA BOW with MITZI GREEN “Skeets” Gallagher —ineluding the first drom-) atization “of {George | Gershwin's “Rhapsody Blue.” Hear, see and enjoy miracle of beauty— this carnival of cleverness this entertainment { su- Preme. It's as modern as tomorrow's newspaper.’ PAUL WHITEMAN And His Band % OF JAZZ” Laura La Plante Music Eddy Beselievre By and his Moonlight Serenaders Wednesday night you will be en- tertained by Hap Kastner and his Oriental Ballroom orchestra from — St. Cloud,

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