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q BUYERS FOR TRACTS Fl Hee KERPING MAINS OUT Seventeenth Street Residents and City Commission Solve + Improvement Tie-Up MANY SIDEWALKS GRANTED Montana-Dakota Power Com- pany Asks Zoning Law Pro- tection on Gas Houses ‘The city commission and interested property-owners will try to solve the Seventeenth street appeal for exten- sion of the city water mains to the block between Rosser avenue and Avenue B by a little real estate deal. The extension will entail a cost of about $1,300; the income under pres- ent conditions would be about $4 or $5 a month. The discrepancy is due to the absence of sufficient residences to make the investment profitable for the city. Burt Korepp, who headed the peti- tioning property-owners, said ‘several vacant lots on the street, some of them held by the county on delin- quent tax sales, could be sold if wa- ter service were extended to the block. After talking this possibility over with the commission, it was agreed that Korepp should produce a list of buy- ers, when the city will consider granting the petition from the pres- ent property-owners. Bid For Lots Accepted ‘The bid of Gale Scott, previously rejected due to an error as to the amount of delinquent tax involved, was accepted for two lots in the Pierce addition on Twentieth street. His bid was $35. The correct amount of taxes delinquent was reported to be $31. A petition for sidewalks along lots 7 to 16 inclusive, block 58, McKenzie and Coffin addition, was granted. Another petition asked that sani- tary sewers be put in on Anderson street from Avenues B Cc. This would extend sewers put Prior to the paving of the blocks around the Roosevelt school. Pictured above is Rev. G. P. Wiillams, D. D., at the left when he came to| _ t een Bismarck in March, 1884, as a Sunday School missionary, and at the right as he is today as national secretary of missions, with responsibility for the misionary work of the American heyondt School Union throughout the Uni- 8. PIONEER MISSIONARY RECALLS ‘DELIGHTFUL Rev. G. P. Williams Recalls Many Bismarck Friends in Letter to Tribune “Memories of those delightful days spent in dear old North Dakota” have not left the mind of Rev. G. P. Williams, D. D., national secretary of missions for the American Sun- day School Union, according to a let- ter received from the pioneer by the Bismarck Tribune. Rev. Williams came to Bismarck in March, 1684, as a Sunday School missionary, and remaised here until September, 1888. During that time he formed many friendships which he still values and he recalls many impressions of the pioneering days which remain dear to him. Zone Law Change Up An estimate from the city engineer set $88 as the expense of putting in shape the narrow space left between the auditorium and the new com- munity building. There are 1713 square feet of ground. There must be some paving done. With this elaboration of the improvements it was regarded as probable that the work will cost more than the esti- mate. A petition was received from the, Montana-Dakota Power company, asking that the zoning ordinance be amended so as to permit the existence of the gas control houses the com- pany has had to place in residence districts, where all forms of build- ings except home structures are pro- hibited. Location of the control buildings already has been granted the company and the request to make the law conform so there will be no trouble later was referred to the board of adjustment. Gets Tax Rebate John Bashara was granted a re- bate on his 1929 personal tax by mak- ing the prior assessment conform to that for 1930. The 1929 assess- ment was higher than that of this year as the result of an error. Petitions for stub sidewalks to a number of properties scattered over the city were granted. ‘The bond of the Haggart Con- struction company on paving done in the northwest section this summer, district No. 10, the amount His complete letter follows: some of my North Dakota during the early tory.” I arrived in Bismarck in March of 1884, and continued my residence in that interesting city un- til September of 1888. At that time Mr, Jewell was the enterprising edi- tor, with “Dan Quinn” as a most in- and able assistant. * 8 the national. secretary of with responsibility for the work of the society throughout the United States. Here I have served for 20 years. “I appreciate the courtesy of the editor in giving me to renew acquaintance with friends, hun- dreds of whose names have not been mentioned,’ yet whose faces are per- fectly clear in my memory and whom to me during those days when, as boy, I moved about through great goodly land, seeking to foundations of the Kingdom of blessed Lord.” Wrenn ee : Additional Sports 1/s _Additional Sports _| Big Ten Coaches Launch Practices Kitzer, :: Purdue, Has Fine Squad to Assist Him in Keeping Title Chicago, Sept. 16—)—Jimmy Phelan ea Noble Kizer with‘the at the material with which he Will DAYS IN N. DAK.’|siesariss cass as those days were identified with the rapidly growing and attractive city of Bismarck. Remembers Capitol Opening “I remember with great clearness the opening of the new capitol build- ing, with Governor Pierce at that into the regions where lay my special duty and privilege. and horse and sleigh many miles, of which I kept a daily record found the total to be something than 19 thousand. My travels me as far south as Aberdeen, the line in South Dakota, north as Neche; from Fargo east, to Medora on the west, the northwest. to Minot, then very outer border of settlement of gE Fe z riEee £8 skis iF northwest. It a5 my privilege yet in North Dakota: Did space per- mit, I should be glad to write of the teresting “I went to Bismarck as a mission- ary of the American Sunday School Union, with North Dakota as my field of service. ‘My instructions were to find the isolated communities in. which there were no churches or Sunday schools and, if possible, start these institutions among the settlers who were at that time coming into that area in such great numbers. I remember the train on which I tray- eled from Fargo to Bismarck, drawn by two locomotives, carried 16 coaches of human freight, enthusiastically first. services ever held in Wash in Cold Harbor, in Minot (which when I held the service was the ter- minus of the Great Northern road) and in towns located al lines north from line of the Great Northern; in Wil- lamsport, in Emmons county, where Dan Williams, later. warden of the Penitentiary in Bismarck, voluntar- ily took up the first collection to pro- vide the Sunday School with books and literature, Mr. Wurst, afterward president of the Agricultural college in North Dakota, was the first super- ‘illtamsport school. Prairies | intendent of the W! of buildings on Front street. ‘1 “Yery soon after my arrival I made the ‘acquaintance of . Dr. Pemngtsti,215, ‘was accepted and filed. | an church, Konjola Wins: Quick Relief Amazes Man ‘New Medicine Does All That Is Claimed for It,’ Says This Hap- py Man When Konjola Goes to Work. Z z ther it shg8P Porter, who will be remem! among the few survivors of sits 88 3 mand in their movement 5 J. Q F g feee cific agent, and many others who in OUT OUR WAY TEARIN' THET HULL PILE Oo FIRE WOOD APART FER, ICH? al A RAGEIT E SUMTAIN' IN. THAR ? Space will not five years, I was elected to the Perintendency of the Mission of Chicago and continued serve in that relation for BEagets ze ISE LOOKIN’ FO PIECES DAT'LL AHS Too TikeD wood. FiT OF COOK SOVE-| Ter BE CHoPPiMm’ Lewis regular center tast season, and ‘Stears.and Hor- ace Buttner, the men who played on each side of him, are back, along with George Van Bibber, last year’s right tackle. . Ralph Welch and Glen Harmeson are gone from the backfield, but Alex Yunevitch, sensational as a sopho- tage men on the field at the University of Chicago, but most of them were new- comers. Dick kota, I traveled by horse and buggy,| ing and spent branch | pair ing and tackling: be! jose on Hooster camp, except that it did not rain. 1 Coach Sam Willaman at Ohio State, and Fritz Crisler, new Minne- sota director, | Nick Cullop Bought Kizer yesterday had his first look |. \ He was No. 3 in the ratings with Stribling No. 2 and Sharkey No. 4. Max Germany, was ‘No. 1, but that was a matter of mere Primo next took the spotlight when his California suspension was brought up. Again he was a winner, the asso- ciation giving him a clean bill through the process of passing & resolution. This, resolution was to the-.effect that hereafter the N. B. A. would not recognize any, against a fighter by a hon-member recognized by the association follows: Heavyweight—Max Schmeling, Ger- many. Light heavyweight—Maxie Rosen- bloom. ia Middleweight—Title vacant, Dave Shade, Rene DeVos, Len Harvey, and Harry Smit! candidates. The Ust of prise fight, chazmplons as Berg. Lightweight—Al Singer. Junior lightweight—Benay Bass, Featherweight—Batting Battalino. Bantamweight—Totle vacant, Al Brown, Kid Francis, Vidal Gregario, and Harry Fierra, leading candidates. Flyweight—Frankie Genaro, By Cincinnati Reds Cincinnati, Ohio, Sept. 16—(P)— ‘Nick Cullop, Minneapolis, champion -home run hitter of the American As- sociation, was purchased yesterday by the Cincinnati Reds. The purchase price was not disclosed. Cullop has been ordered to report immediately to Manager Dan Howley in Boston.. He has hit.55 home runs this year and is batting over .370. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1930 by Restoring Lots to Ta F ; e id i air iiss, him. In championifig the cause of: this thoroughly different young man who is a bit “batty” on the subject |Taine, noted Hungayian actress, in of a holiday for young mien, Miss Harding is a joy to watch and a de- light to listen to. Not sthee “Mary Dugan” has she Had a role so well suited to her talents. “Holiday,” which was imaginatively directed by Edward Griffith, will be presented at the Paramount theatre starting Wednesday. likened toa symphony of music, so smoothly and tremendously does it build to forceful and poignant climax and enc The story was written by Tristram each had 80 men on the |: initial showup. Crisler limited the first Gopher sessions to Lim! up exercises, while Willaman Hah tered Bigg a erage pi a Grill, a long assignment for tideumasher ‘terapeesanes Towa’s opening day exercises were anything but encouraging to Burton Ingwersen. Less than $0 men report- ed and few of them have had previ- ous experience. Giant Italian Rated No. 4 at Session of National Box- ing Association Omaha, Neb. 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