The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 8, 1930, Page 3

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’ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1930 3 MANDAN NEWS Bismarck Man Gets Broken Arm in Highway Auto Crash INEW ENGLAND PAIR ‘ngvard Peterson and Ernest Bailey Hurt When Rue-Lo- gan Cars Collide Ingvard Peterson, 32, Bismarck, was \n a Capital City hospital today with 4 broken arm and Ernest Bailey was aursing cuts and bruises following a collision between two automobiles on the memorial highway between Bis- marck and Mandan shortly after midnight this morning. Three other persons in the two au- tomobiles escaped without injury. They were Charles Rue, Bismarck, and Mrs. T. J. Logan anda Mr. Glarum, both of Mandan. Peterson was driving Rue’s auto- mobile toward Bismarck with Rue and Bailey as passengers while Mrs. Logan and Glarum were in another automobile going toward Mandan, with Mrs, Logan driving. Leaving the right side of the road, Peterson sideswiped the Logan ma- chine, with the Rue automobile being badly damaged. No other cars were near at the time of the accident. Mr. Rue this morning agreed to pay all damages incurred in the mis- hap. He said that he and Bailey were sleeping in the machine and knew Uttle about what happened but said it appeared his car was in the wrong. Peterson was reported resting well in the hospital today, where he was taken by passersby shortly after the collision. Bailey received treatment for his cuts and bruises at the Man- dan Deaconess hospital and left aft- er his wounds were dressed. ERNEST FLECK IS SLIGHTLY BETTER} Examination of Students in Mandan School for Menin- gitis Is Completed A slight improvement in the condi- tion of Ernest Fleck, 10 year old Man- dan boy who is suffering with cere- brospinal meningitis, was noted this morning by attendants at the Man- dan Deaconess hospital. Ernest was stricken with the dis- ease Wednesday evening and rushed to the hospital. His affliction preci- pitated a thorough examination of students in the Central school, Man- dan, where he was a pupil. The ex- amination of all students in the building was conducted under the di- rection of the bureau of preventable diseases of the state health depart- ment. Throat cultures of the students examined Thursday and Friday @ cleaning of the building was ordered. Ernest is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Fleck, 201 First avenue northwest. MARRIED 50 YEARS Friends, Seven Children and 21 Grandchildren Participate in Party New England, N. D., Nov. 8.—About 80 neighbors and friends gathered to do honor to Mr. and Mrs. K. G. Ny- strom at their farm home three miles northwest of New England. The oc- casion was the 50th wedding anniver- sary of this couple, who on Nov. 5, 1880, were married at Upsala, Sweden. Seven of the eight children of Mr. and Mrs. Nystrom were present. They are: Mrs. Ester Mineur, who lives in Sweden; Hjalmar Nystrom, New Eng- land; Mrs. Erick Nelson, Minneapolis; Leonard Nystrom, Minneapolis; Emil and Ernest Nystrom. New England; Mrs, William Schultz, Turton, S. D.; and Mrs. George, Clausen, Conde, S. D. Fourteen of the 21 grandchildren also were present. Mr, and Mrs. K. G. Nystrom came to the United States in 1906. They spent the first year in Minneapolis and then came to New England and filed on a homestead. They have since made their home here except for two years they spent near Tur- ton, 8. D. They now are living on the former Jess Edens homestead. The celebration of their anniversary was a surprise to this couple. It was arranged by neighbors with the as- sistance of the children. A large bouquet of yellow chrysan- themums, presented by the seven sons and daughters, was presented Mr. and Mrs. Nystrom and there was an address by Rev. Edward Nordby, pastor of the Norwegian Lutheran church at New England. Following the playing of “Silver Threads Among the Gold,” and the singing of a duet by Alice ‘and Mildred Nystrom, A. P. Magnuson, an old neighbor, presented @ purse of gold containing more than $100. 1,612 Elevators in State Operating Nov 1. North Dakota had had 1,612 elevators in operation Nov. 1, according to the state railroad commission’s bulletin. A total of 1,625 licenses had been issued on that date but five elevators were transferred, three closed, and five burned during October. License bonds in effect Nov. 1 to- taled $8,125,000. These are the $5,000 bonds filed with the application for license. Storage bonds in effect the same date totaled $1,920,473. These are stored grain. f A total of $17,500 had been received for license fees Nov. 1. This figure has been reduced to $17,346 through MANDAN ELEVEN 10 REST UNTIL GAME refunds of $154 for various reasons. Second Girl Born to American Maharanee St. Germain-en-Laye, France, Nov. 8—(®)—The former Maharajah of \dore today announced the birth of Ine Coaches McMahan and McLeod! a second daughter to the Maharanee Will Give Men Light Work- outs Monday Mandan’s high school football team last night closed a week of strenu- Sharmistabal Holkar, the former Nancy Miller of Seattle. ! The child was born Thursday at the country home here of the former Maharajah. Both mother and child are doing well. ‘The former Maharajah has been re- ous practice in preparation for their! ported recently as hoping the child final game of the season with Bis-} would be a boy so that he would have marck at Hughes field, Bismarck,|a male heir to his tremendous for- Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Coach Leonard C. McMahan said today his men will be given only a light workout, wigh limbering up ex- ercises and signal drill, Monday aft- ernoon. Mandan, having improved slowly during the season, expects to give the Demons a tough battle. McMahan probably will start Byron | B® Spielman at quarterback, Frank Boehm and Leonard House at half- backs, Joe Eckroth at fullback, Lloyd Dietrich and Al Schwartz at ends, Sterling Byerly and Ephraim Owens at tackles, Captain Walter Kalpacoff j and Douglas Lang at guards, and Art ; Kuebker at center. Coach Roy D. McLeod will have all of his regular Demons exeept Halfback Eddie Agre for the game,| He also will give his charges only a light workout Monday night. Harley Robertson, Minot coach, will officiate the game, with Rev. | E. H. lection by the Opie S. Rindahl umpire and R. H. Kratz Dead oeeneD... STERLING YOUTH FINED Pleading guilty to a charge of speeding, Isham Belk, Sterling youth, was fined $5 when brought before James E. Campbell, magistrate, yesterday. NOTICE Oe REpmarion or’ | DEMPTION | State of Norn Dakets. Office of County Aud Bi ee of County Auditor, Bismarck, North Dakot: To Z E. Boss. Minneapolis, Min- nesota. You are hereby notified that the tract of land hereinafter described and which was assessed in your name for taxation for the rear 1926 was on the 13th day of Decemb: 7. duly sold. as provided by law. for the de- linquent taxes of the year 1926, and that the time for redemption from said sale will expire ninety days from ‘the completed service of this notice, Said land is described as follows¢ County 5. Block 54, Governor Pierce Addition to the City of Bismarck, North Dakot: ‘Amount sold for, $0.71. Subsequent taxes paid by pur- chaser $1. ‘Amount required to redeem at this date, $2.07. In ‘addition to the above amount you will be required to pay the costs of} the service of this notice and interest | as provided by law and unless you| redeem said land from said sale be- fore the expiration of the time for redemption as above stated, a. deed thereof will issue to the holder of the tax sale certificate as provided by Mandan police | ot| State of North tunes. Minneapolis Banks Arrange New Merger Minneapolis, Nov. 8—(?)}—The Me- tropolitan National bank, with de- its of $10,054,388 and resources of $11,410,505 will be consolidated Mon- day with the Northwestern National bank and the Minnesota Loan and Trust company, it was announced to- day. Both are Northwestern Bancor- poration affiliates. The consolidation (brings the Northwestern National de- posits of the Bancorporation affiliates here to $146,407,329. , FIRST EVANGELICAL CHURCIT Seventh street a Rosser avenue. re E. Herzberg, minister. y church school for ail de- hip service at 11. Se lerzberg. Special s oir. ristian Edeavor, 7 p.n at Does Brotherhood z mon by irs Topic, ny mon by Ira E, {selection by the choir. | A sdries of special meetings will | begin Sunday Rev. Garnet You are invited to attend th ices, NOTICE OF EXPIR REDEMPTION Dakota, Burleigh, ss. Office of County Auditor, North Dakota To Z. E. Brown, Minneapolis, nesota You are hereby notified that tract of land hereinafter describ andwhich was assessed in your name for taxation for the vear 1926 was on the 13th day of December. uly sold, as provided by law. for the de- linauent taxes of the year 1926, and that the time for redemption ‘from said sale will expire ninety days from the completed service of this notice, Said land is described as follows: Lot 6, Block 54. Governor Pierce Addition to the City of Bismarck, North Dakota. Amount sold for, $0.71. Subsequent taxes paid by pur- chaser $1.03, moans Tequired to redeem at this date, $2.0 In addition to the above amount you will be required to pay the costs of the service of this notice and interest! as provided by law and unless you redeem said Jand from said sale be- fore the expiration of the time for redemption as above stated, a deed} thereof will issue to the holder of the | fax sale certificate us provided by aw. County of Bismarck, Min- “witness my hand and official seal) 19 this 24th day of Oct RY oTSSNTTNG Auditor Burleigh County, (10-25—11-1-8) | Witness my hand and official neal this 24th day of Octo . A.C. ISAMING! Auditor Burleigh ‘County 10: ele HI N.D. Sinclair Lewis Would Like to Be Rid of His ‘Bad Boy’ Reputation New York, Nov. 8.—(?)— Sin- ! clair Lewis Noble prize winner of © 1930, would like to be rid of his “pad boy” reputation. He has been called names against his wishes—this tall, thin, nervous, red-haired satirist who put “Main Street” and “Babbitt” into the American vecabulary, Critics have called him a ro- mantic realist, a reformer. He has been accused of attacking | small towns, civic’ boosters, preachers, doctors, business men, all because he went to them for his characters. “I wish,” said Lewis, “they'd just Iet me be a novelist.” He has his private opinion of the middle west, but he insists on keeping it private. He prefers to talk about his at- tempts at journalism, or, better | yet, the star reporting of his wife, Derothy Thompson Lewis. “He has an almost childlike ad- miration,” his wife once said, “for anyone who can hold a job ona | newspaper.” Lewis couldn't. His first news- paper werk was in New Haven, Conn., while he was attending Yale. the old San Francisco Bulletin, then for the Asscciated Press. Was Bad Reporter “I guess I was.a bad reporter. | I couldn't go out and get a story | in which I was not interested. { “I scon was back in Washing- ten as editor—and office boy—of the Volta Review, a magaizne for the deaf. Then I came to New York to work for a publishing heuse. “The Bulletin had paid me $30 @ week, the Associated Press paid me $25, the Velta Review $15, and the New York job $12.50. That ‘was my progress.” Lewis had left Yale at the be- ginning of his senior year and joined Helicon Hall, a New Jersey colony founded by Upton Sinclair. There he listened to Emma Gold- man and wrote peetry. After a while he moved to an obscure bedrocm in Manhattan's gas house district. He wrote jckes and was assistant editor of a now defunct magazine. Then he went back to Yale and got his B. A, degree in 1908, It was while he was werking in a publisher's office in New York, after his discouraging newspaper career, that he wrete his first revel, “Our Mr. Wrenn.” Since then he has written 11 novels and two plays. The novels have sold 1,669,000 copies in English and several hundred thousand more in translations. The plays were failures. Of the money his nevels carned him, he said he has “plenty.” Once a warm socialist, he says he now has no political affilia- tion. He is vehemently “ ‘again’ prohibition.” Of his own novels, “Arrow- Managed to Stick “It was the only newspaper job I wasn’t fired from,” he said. “After I left New Haven 1 went to the Waterloo, Towa, Couricr at $18 a week. I was editorial | writer, proofreader, telegraph edi- | tor and dramatic critic. | “UT was fired in the middle of | the first week. The editor came to me and said: ‘I've got a tele- gram from yqur successor.’ “What? I said. “T've got a telegram from your successor. I didn’t want to say anything until I heard from him. bonds given to cover shipments of ! Moritz of Marion will assist the pas tor. He will preach each evening at | {7 commencing Monday Nov 10. } he| | smith” is his personal favorite— But we'll give you a full week's “the only one I can stand read- pay. We want our boys to leave ing.” satisfied.” afew weets he was mith tne | 10 Continue Search charity organization society, in- terviewing applicants fer charity. He didn’t fit there, either. So he borrowed $100 and went to California. The father of Stephen Vincent Benet, the poet, was commander of the arsenal at Benica. He put Lewis up in the arsenal for three months. Lewis stayed in California about a year and wrote poetry, short storics and jokes. He sold For Missing Airmen Vancouver, B. C., Nov. 8—(P)— {Search for Robin Renahan, Van- couver pilot, and two companions lost since October 280n the northern British Columbia coast, was ordered continued to air today. Plans were ; formulated for a five-plane concerted search for both Renahan and Cap- tain E. J. A. Burke, aviator, lost in the Laird river district since October bb one thing—a joke. He worked on Armistice Day Closing The following stores will close all day Tuesday, Armistice Day BISMARCK FOOD MARKET BROWN & TIEDMAN JONES & PATERA LOGAN’S R. T. GROCERY SPEAKS GROCERY aneana UANDOUOGUUODONSOUNOOUGOUCCAUGAUNEOOUOOOOONCOOODUEOOEOAAOOONOONCUEUDOUOCUONOOONNOSOCoNNONOOONON 5 Want Ads When You Want Them Tribune Want Ads work for you all day—morn- ing—noon and night. That's why they bring best results. That's why people use most of them. Place Your Want Ads | in the Bismarck | | Tribune For Best Results Phone 32 And Ask for the WANT AD DEPT. P. Whitney, chairman of band board, |St. Paul Broker Is Charged With Fraud: St. Paul, Nov. 8&—(?)—James A. Connolly, bond broker of St. Paul, | was arrested here Jate yesterday for federal authorities at New York City on charges of mail fraud, growing out the local | CASE IS RECESSED jdurors Hear How Rickard Re- assured Both Gene and Jack in Telegrams New York, Nov. 8—(%)—With only arguments remaining before the case goes to the jury, trial of the suit in s, which Timothy J. Mara, sports pro- of the sale of alleged stolen bonds. moter, is seeking $500,000 of Gene! The warrant for his arrest was is- Tunney's earnings as heavyweight Sued here by Federal Judge John B. champion, was recessed over the Sewer at the request of George week-end. Heisey, assistant United States After Tunney had completed his | ‘tict attorney here, following receipt testimony in cross-examination yes- |of certified copies of an indictment | terday, a-series of telegrams between | Charging Connolly with mail fraud | | the late Tex Rickard and Jack Demp- |i the southern federal district of sey regarding a match with Tunncy | | New York. were placed in the record by the de-| Arraigned before Judge Sanborn, | fense to support its contention that | Connolly-pleaded not guilty through Mara, who claims 25 per cent of | bis attorney and was released on Tunney’s earnings had nothing to do | bonds of $15,000 pending a hearing with arranging the Dempsey-Tunncy | Nov. 18 on the government's motion match. to remove him to New York. ‘ Tunney in direct examination told| The indictment against Connolly how Rickard assured him Dempsey | charges him with using the mails to was a sick man, afflicted with boils, | defraud two New York firms, “and | greatly aged and easy to beat. loth The Rickard-Dempsey telegrams | Hi presented the other side of the pic- | ture. = ; In his messages to Dempsey, iden- | tified from the stand by his confiden- tial secretary, Miss Nacmi Lowensohn, 1 Rickard described Tunney as being easier to beat than Harry Wills. told Dempsey he could have full protece | tion in New York state and assured | him he could pick his own referee and | | judges for the fight. is charged with representing to BAND DIRECTOR CURED | Dickinson, N. D., Ni 8.—E. Rob- erts, Topeka, Kans., will become di-| Tonight Only KEN MAYNARD ii “Mountain Justice” A thrilling western comedy- drama Also NEWS - - CARTOON and COMEDY SE STE Starting Monday 6% An underworld gal- lant high-hats his way to romance and riches, Samuel Goldwyn presets NALD LMAN 4 les’ @ & a @ o Has ° e AN CHRIS vector of the Dickinson, Belfield, Glen Ullin, and Hebron bands in the ed |future, it has been announced by F. ‘Believe British Air UBLIC utilities are recognized as among the safest established industries, hecause A with Of NORTHWESTERN PUBLIC ey gs SERVICE COMPANY TMAS BUYING IS The holidays bring increased activity in business. that this particular time is especially opportune to pay your past due ‘obligations if you have any. munity and to insure the highest credit rating to yourself. Pay in Full by the l ( th Or As Agreed Bismarck-Mandan Credit Bureau, Inc. (Where Your Paying Habits Are Being Recorded) those companies that he was in law- | | might never return from the voyage ful possession of certain bonds and | to India which ended in the tragedy | securities, valued at $13.000, whereas near Beauvais, France, on October 5. it is alleged he knew the securities Jy his will, filed today, he left ail previously had been stoler he owned to his brother, Col. Roger Gordon Thomson, “in the event of my death during the flight of the 5 | R-101 to India and return.” The Chief Foresaw Death document, hastily scribbled on a single sheet of paper, was dated Oct. London, Nov. 8.—(#)—Lord Thom- | 3, less than 48 hours before the diri- son, the air minister who was killed | gible crashed. The estate was esti- in the crash of the dirigible R-101, | mated at about 1,737 pounds sterling. recognized the possibility that he | (About $8,685). Thank You Voters of Burleigh County For the splendid support which you gave me at the polls for my reclection. Without your help I could not have been reelected and I want you to understand I appreciate that support. FRED SWENSON Register of Decds Your First Consideration Safety? Orly they supply services which are indispensable to Limited the every-day lifegof the modern community Allotment and consequently the securities of efficiently Available lo Our operated utilities are most favorably held in Comes investment circles. v Cumulative Preferred Stock HE’ Northwestern Public Service Co. is one of the most active participants in the development of South Dakota and Nebraska and the company has deemed it wise to defray a part of the cost of the initial investment through the sale of preferred shares to its cus- tomers. This is welcomed by our customers as providing an attractive, safe investment which bears 6% payable quarterly, and embodying the most practical form of public éwnersh’» “ty Huron, South Dekot: ¥ EMPLOYEE! of the | North Dakota Power & Light Co. JUST AHEAD It is most fitting Thus benefit yourself and the entire com- DANCE AT. THE DOME TONIGHT Music by the Royal Knights, a colored orchestra. Special entertainment by Jewell Lostad, acro- Miss Lostad has worked with the Oregon circuit and a number of others. hatic and toe dancer. x

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