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‘North Dakota's Oldest Newspaper ESTABLISHED 1873 | ‘ ys City of Santo Domingo ARCK TRIBUNE The Weather Mostly fair tonight and Friday. Not toch change it onupelaeate PRICE FIVE CENTS “. ,.) BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1930 Il Celebrate Ga | Hurricane Destro HUNDREDS OF LIVBS)| Peticeman tay Get | ARE LOST AS STORM) 2 cies se erence SWEEPS OVER ISLAND).zinsiass crise, to appear in police -|swer charges of violating traffic ordi- nances. Most of the cases are based ; Scenes of Horror Are Enacted|on taiture to display proper parking ' lights but other infractions also are as Wind Blows at Rate of 160 Miles Per Hour FRENCH PAR START BARLY FOR TEXAS T0 LAND $25,000 PRIZE Coste and Bellonte Begin 1400 Mile Hop After Hour’s Delay MANAGER. FLYING AHEAD City of Dallas Awaits Coming With Big Reception Planned 2F eu ie The and those busineks wild collecting to the was offered fusion Paris-to y ppealed | ‘The takeoff of tha: v Js and to |the Texas city was. f all in the necessity. os a Ui be H | TESTOR JONES LAW i a “ i three Constitutionality of ‘Five and|who » eA a! V ‘Ten’’ Measure to Be Attacked | Johnson and In High Court pee See, t # i el atl ei i 8 z QF ug E E i i 4 i f if Ba f ‘ and as he turned to 4 tionsL over the head with f A maf struck him on y, socks of | was then shot as he ‘ last the] The police chief Jones ac-|shot st his assailants ‘ pose harah | three ~ penalty men d and from | after the ae pe wit I i i I He i Hf if RRR i : ri 4 ® EF i et E 5 i TUL H, Hi ii 4 ! ul ul E i hi | _ THE OLD CONTRASTS WITH THE NEW as historigns messure tt but tt has wrought wonders in North Dakota's capital city. The pictures above offer some- this gauge | hted in Harper's Weekly of December 14, 1878, It was drawn by William A. Rogers during a visit to in laying the pipeline which is bringing to Bismarck natural gas, its newest fuel. uged to swing the pipe into place after the ditches had been dug by automatic the old days. in the edition of Harper’s Weekly 52 years ago. FUGITIVE FOUND SLAIN | Riverside Drive. ‘The body was iden- York, Sept. 4—(7)—A man tified by fingerprints and_poiice pho- since last April for|tograpbs as that of Morris Howard, { Advertising Copy | 4 Brought by Coste —+ New York, Sept. 4—(4)—The first newspaper advertising copy to arrive in New York from Paris by airplane appeared in the New York Times. In addition to more than twenty-one columns of advertising, the transat- lantic plane “Question Mark” brought a special model dress created by Mai- son Callot of Paris, consigned to John Wanamaker. Five advertisements in i all were received. ANCIENT RITUAL OF JEWISH CHURCH T0 DEDICATE TEMPLE New Building Here to Be Opened With Appropriate Ceremony Sunday, September 7 ‘MANY COMING FROM AFAR i ak |Three Separate Services Will Be Conducted During Day A ritualistic ceremony of the an- cient: Jewish church will be enacted here Sunday, Sept. 7, when the Bis- marck Hebrew congregation dedi- cates its new temple and the public is cordially invited to attend the program, it is announced by Rabbi | J. H. Mekler. ‘The new temple is located at Fifth street and Avenue C. ‘The program, having 18 separate events in three main divisions, will begin ati 2 o'clock. Invitations have been sent to 500 prominent Jews throughout the state to attend the program, but officials gf the local congregation are not cer- fain as to how many will be able to come to-Bismarck e first division of the ceremony be enacted in tke auditorium in the basement of the temple, the sec- ond on the stairway leading up to the synagogue on the main floor, and the third in the synagogue. Mekler Opens Program Rabbi Mekler will give a preface in the auditorium to open the program (Continued on page nine) ARTIST EXPLAINS OLD-TIME SKETCH | Flavor of Pioneer Days Is Vividly Recalléd by Comment and Pictures at Left Introduction to Bismarck of natural | gas, a new and convenient fuel, re- | calls to old-timers the progress which \has been made during the last 50 years. The sketch from Harper’s Weekly, | reprinted at the left of this column, brings back frontier days and scenes more vividly than a word-picture pos- |sibly could go. | For that reason and today when the city’s progress is brought forc- ibly home to us, The Tribune reprints 4 | this rare old sketch. The explanation of the sketches, as made by Artist William A. Rogers and printed by the magazine, recalls the flavor of pioneer days. The Trib- une does not guarantee its accuracy but it is offered as an exhibit which serves to emphasize the changes made by the passage of only 52 years in North Dakota’s capital city. Commenting on the sketch, the magazine said: “On page 988 will be found a series of sketches in and about the town of Bismarck, North Dakota. Our artist writes as follows regarding the scene in the opera house: ‘The night I attended, a gen- tleman who was posted gave me the names and histories of many of the audience. A couple of men came in who seemed to be bosom friends. One was small and light, the other a tall, burly fellow.. The little man is under sentence of hanging. The other man was the sheriff. “‘Nearby, on the other side, sat “Chang,” a noted desperado, who has killed several men about here when he had nothing else to do. “As the acting is not remarkably part of their own amusement. One of the small lads of the town is past- ling a notice of next week’s opening. of the regular season on the proprie- tor’s hack. When performers are searce, the leading lawyer of Bare be is dered man has the liberty of the place!’ ” Commenting un other sketches, the magazine caid: “The telegraph re- pair car (upper right) is a novelty but of great practical service. It runs with a sid2 or back wind, and is sometimes almost lifted from the jtrack bodily, and makes tremendous time. Recently they made the trip to Fargo—200 miles—in 15 hours, “The Black Hills freight train (lower right) consists of eight or 10] velop and wagons coupled together and oxen, all hitched together. “The little groggery with the peli- can over it (right center) is a char- found today,-dead. His alias Moe Horowitz, 42, wanted for the| acteristic feature of Bigmarck. body with five bullet wounds in. it! shooting of George Hodson, secretary] “Indians selling robes (top left) is was thrown out of an automobile onfo|of the Amazon Leather company. a frequent scene on the street here.” s Day IMONTANA-DAKOTA fot the services. ,” FIRM SPONSORING FETE ON SEPT. 6TH Parade, Band Concerts, Floral Souvenirs and Free Street Dance Are Features FLARES WILL LIGHT SCENE Speedy Construction of Pipe- line to City Was Engineer- ing Achievement » With natural gas service installed in many Bismarck homes, the city looked forward today to the celebration on Saturday of “Gas Day.” - It will be @ municipal celebrat sponsored by the Montana-Dakota Power company, which piped the gas from the wells in Montana to Bis- marck and thereby gave the city and many smaller towns in the Missouri Slope country natural gas service. Saturday's festivities will open at 2 Pp. m. with a parade of gas company employes and their families. In ad- dition there will be some floats dis- playing gas merchandise. It will begin at the company’s sales office on Third street, south of Broad- way, and go south to Main avenue. Thence it will travel east to Ninth street, north to Broadway and west to Third street, where it will disband. Clarion Larson's juvenile: band will give @ concert on the postoffice lawn. at 2:30 o'clock and the sales office of the Montana-Dakota company will keep open house all afternoon for the ‘Continued on page nine) ¢. B, DICKINSON NAMED HEAD OF SCHOOL AT PIERRE South Dakota Institution Has \, 500 Students; Is Promotion. for Le ' Mart Announcement that he has peen transferred to the superintendency ot the government Indian school at Pierre, 8. D., was made today by C. B. Dickinson, for the last nine years superintendent of the school for In- dian girls here. The transfer will be made October 1 and is one of a number of shifts being made in the federal Indian service by reason of a law which be- came effective August 1 and which provides for the retirement of Indian service officials at the age of 65, Dickinson said. C. R. Whitlock, who has been su- perintendent of the Pierre school, will be transferred to Yakima, Wash., a8 agent on the reservation there, suc- ceeding the present agent who has reached the age of retirement. The school at Pierre educates boys as well as girls and is much larger than the local school, Dickinson said. It has about 500 students and the ent has spent $100,000 for a new school building and $100,000 for other improvements there this year. The local school has 135 students. Along with the greater responsibil- ity, the position carries an increase in salary, Dickinson said. He that the policy of the government In- The retirment of many older men the Indian service, now and during the next few years, will make a large number of these promotions possible, Dickinson said. F Regrets Dickinson came to Bismarck nine years ago and during the ensuing Period has taken an ini local affairs. He and his have become an integral part of the social life of Bismarck and Dickinson expressed regret at the prospect of breaking these ties. In view of the fact that the govern- mental policy does not seem clude enlargement of the local school, ‘ however, Dickinson said he feels that he has accomplished all he can in the way of constructive work. On numerous occasions he has been high- ly complimented for the manner in which the local school has progressed under his administration. Dickinson has been in the Indian service for the last 15 years. He had interesting, the audience furnish a| dian the Bismarck school in 1921. In 1926 he received an order to Pleasant, Mich. but the order was cancelled as the result of a storm of — building up the local institution. The present situation is somewhat different, however, Dickinson said, in that the Indian Bureau has met the objections which he also had to being * moved at that time. ee 4 In notifying him to move to Pierre, — Indian Commissioner important posts in the service. The transter wes wade by Come checks the records.of the men in the service.