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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1930 3. Mandan high school domestic science companied a party of engineers who | ¢———H————_—_____« oye | a tc | : .! ‘The North Dakota team will jud lasses, which was setved in the high FIRST CONDUCTOR located the coal fields near Red!’ 15 Jeweled Watch, iN. D. College Students in soba ait as aay cata 4° |. s: MANDAN NEWS | school gymnasium. Lodge. The tri vo weeks | i i jp required two weeks “hie Music for the affair was to be fur- {from Billings and marked the start | | Lost 20 Years Ago, Will Judge at Chicago ‘cams trom all parts of the United nished by the Mandan high school or- ‘lof coal production there. i 4 pT 3 Morton Coun: R d chestra and other entertainment fea- A RO | Was ce eas ; Continues to Run | rarco, xp, Nov. 13.~To compere Sates One eat ti aoa $id e ross tures planned were exercises by pu- Lindt nails Aemageres j Uitte college Juul Bection (SE the | CORSE Bevetnty ti uns Sane | Sweetman was born in County Tip- {International Fat Stock Show, Chi-)cach college team will judge 12 rings, pils in the city school system, ac-! | a ° © cording to Rev. Gilbert W. Stewart,| DIES IN MONT. ‘AN Ass Treland, March 4, 1831, His! McClusky, N. D., Nov. 13.—A watch jogeo, November North Dakota wt f ‘ . - H : F , [cagO, s ta which includes three of draft horses. 4 Roll Call to Begin Friday Rotary secretary. 7 father was Irish while his mother was/ lost in a field 20 years ago, finally | agricultural college students, accom- three of beet cattle, three of sheep The two clubs will hold another of Scotch descent. He came to the; came to the surface and was found by |panied by Professor Al Severson. ‘and three of hogs. = joint meeting shortly before Thanks- ee ae ._ |United States when 16 years old and | Anton Putz, former Sheridan county ;coach, will leave Fargo, sday En route to Chicago the Agricul- 26 Women, Headed by Mrs. T.|/ Eyeball Cut b: ,|oint meeting shortly before Thanks-/ Fred Sweetman, 100, Was Dis-jengaged in various sorts of work.) commissioner. And furthermore, it /7OmInE. LeaNe Tat ihe euniial toe |tuPit ‘college CoaiH’ @IN Saka aeverdl 4 Ht nee | yeba: ui yy ;|Rev. Stewart said, At the Lions’ charged for Bumping Gen- finally entering railroad work. still runs. stock classic. Those making the trip|stops where the judging training may : , J. McGillic, Will Canvass || Reed in Unusual | regular weekly meeting yesterday, it : | He met Gregory Smith, second! Mr, Putz recalls that Rudolph Mictz,)#re Wesley Bruns, Oriska; Pau! Kas-|be continued. ‘These «stops will be «? City of Mand | s 4 |!was tentatively planned to have the eral Custer Around , {President of the Northern Pacific, in| employed by a neighbor, lost the |son. Blaisdell; How: McLeod, West |made at the University of Minnesota ity of Mandan | Hunting Accident ||session Wednesday, Nov. 26, but this Si Ee i January 1870, and started work as a|watch while plowing about the year|Fargo; Richard Noyes, Cando, Carl |lowa State college, the University of (Probably will be changed to Tuesday. Red Lodge, Mont., Nov. 13.—(P)— conductor. In the fall of the same| 1910, Putz has been farming the land | Roberts, Egeland, and Chester Wells. Illinois and several shorter visits at Twenty-six Mandan women, under) James M. Hanley, Mandan at- |Rev. Stewart said, because it is the|Fred Sweetman, the firet. conductor|Year he became yardmaster at Du-, for several years and found the watch |Tiosg aree liv ray. the supervision of Mrs. James T.| torney, today was recovering from Lions regular weekly day and also!on the Northern Pacific, who was in luth. In 1872, he was the first pas-| While seeding rye. The watch has a SaaS Meese seth Ach McGillic, chairman, will begin the| an injury, received in an unusual | Will permit those wishing’ to leave his 100th year, died here Tuesday |S°nser conductor operating over the} 15 jewel movement and is of a well} —SSCSCS~<73] FS ——= annual roll call for the American Red| fashion, which almost robbed him the city for the Thanksgiving holiday | night. Mississipi river bridge west of Brain-| known make, Cross at 9 o'clock Friday morning. | of the sight in his right eye. {to attend the meeting and leave for rt . whose Y .|erd and later on the Dakota division | SE eed the Full Call fer, itugtine tn swampeiadds north (thelr destinations wets coped’ te infirmities of old age, went|Petween Moorhead, Minn. andj z tape r the Morton county chapter of the} of Dawson, Kidder county, Mr. | The special exercises to be given by|to work for ihe railroad when the | Jamestown, N. D. \ TODAY organization will begin in all parts! Hanley walked through a patch the pupils at this noon’s program first excavation for the road-bed was After leaving the Northern Pacific & of the county under the general su-| of reeds. A gust of wind whipped | “ere arranged by J. C, Gouid. super-|made one-half mile west of the pres-| following the Custer complaint in| and pervision of A. W. Furness, secretary.| 8 reed about the saw-like edge of |intendent of schools. ‘sent station at Carlton, Minn, near|18%6. Sweetman took part in plonecr- Molalla 1 gi TRE Gounty, goal is appron tude: | the reed cutting Mr. Hanley's eye | | Duluth. é ing activities through North Dakota | ' FRIDAY , $1,000, with Mandan expect >) batt, FINED FOR DRUNKENESS | This was in 1870, Six years later) 6n0 Montana, and was for sometime Wain: ‘Mrs. McGillic expects her commit- The attorney was fortunate in Pleading guilty to a charge of|he was discharged as the result of a engaged in townsite location and de- ‘ S eewomen to clean up the grester| Tecelving immediate first aid, ERE as ta De a 5 ead ia i eee Pighethtenatnhns BLAZING THRILLS \ sh * ’ Campbell, Mandan poli He worked at various ti aart of the local drive before tomor- ince a Mandan physician was in | p police magistrate, | Custer, famous Indian fighter. Sweet-| at various times for the this reme tf sart of the local drive beting in the| the hunting party. ‘The cut came F. A. Peterson, Mandan, was fined $5. s | \ dy jrive are Mesdames J. A. Kasper, within a fraction of a millimeter Northern Pacific after that and in; 1904 became road master of a line| Nature always warns you that aT man was in charge of a train bucking} WILD EMOTIONS—IN THE heavy snowdrifts between Jamestown) Robert Ellison, Al Pfenning, J. A.| of the pupil of the eye-ball, the Detroit Police Probe {and Bismarck, N. D. from Bridger, Mont. to Bear Creek. Phd STORY THE PAPERS &ritz, M. J. Tobin, Fred Tharp, Al| doctor said. Poisolitne of Fail Didn't Like Bumps eee Si the fret feeling DARED NOT TELL! Weinhandl, Ross Hartwick, D. E.| No infection has set.in and the ng of Family} custer, with Mrs. Custer, accupiea|C#bID in the hills neat Fromberg.| that you are catch: macane Fouts, B. K. Bjornson, Marvin Bull,| eye today was healing slowly but : a private car attached to the train|Mont.. coming here when he became) ing cold, Grov | Darl Leekley, A. L. Marvick, W. D.| surely. Detroit, Nov. 13.—UP—A family of]and complained that they were being|°" jously ul Laxative BROMO Hughes, J. M. McLeod, C. F. Ellis, sas 'three was taken to receiving hospital’ handled roughly in the bucking Leo IT RET RST QUININE is the John Kleinschmidt, George Stein- | carly today, apparently polssned and process. He demanded to have his! Denhoff Railroad Man ; qviske**;727, °° | srueck, Henry R. Handtmann, A. H. E -|police began an investigation, the car left while snow was bucked and| * Wilkinson, Robert Ford, J. H. Gipple, early part of which left them puzzled that the train should return and pick/ Hurt in Fall from Car as to the cause. The parents, Charles 'j; up when the way was cleared. This, vents colds. _ headaches ‘} Seorge Goodbale, John Rothlisberger, B. D. Rowley, and Bruce Tobin. Anger, 59, and his wife, Lydia, 36,’ Sweetman refused t Denh it vs : . , 36, © do because of| off, N. D., Nov. 13.—H. D.j Getaboxatany without HIGH SCHOOL GUESTS. ous beret and in such a seri- fear of losing the car. Custer com-! Scott, section foreman on the N. P. drug store, 306. de i i : WOMEN'S COURSES | OUS condition that no extended €X- 'pjained to the superintendent at Bis- Beatie portend eet eon tie Always keep gah hed) a ! | " » . “ anand Lae when he fell from a flat car ee | GAME) CAllbe) “By was fees gerioualy ag= | UUE sus, CWReUDAN's Bettio€s TOMS trent ; Lunetwen y tected: | fracturing three ribs. Prepared by Domes-' fected. . Mr. Scott was superintending the Then Sweetman began delivering! 9 r unloadit LIFT CARLETON QUARANTINE foodstuff to the soldiers at Fort) when the train Auoaemiy ieoved for Grove § Laxative WILL OPEN FRID AY tic Science Classes; Or- chestra Plays Northfield, Minn,, Nov. 13—v7)—|Xeosh and one of the ironies of fate) ward throwing Mr. Scott on the rails. B RO M re) \ Quivantine ‘rectrictions in effect at “aS that, soon after. he was to be; He was taken to McClusky, where | : | | i n 1, ‘ 3 Carleton college here for two weeks | One of the first to arrive at the battle) he received medical attention. After | Ella Johnson of N. D. A. C. to] Mandan's two service clubs. Lions’ because of infantile paralysis, were field where Custer was killed by In-| showing little or no signs of improve- QU I N INE | and Rotary, were joint guests this! remoy, ii a fe | | joved but students eed not to) dans in his famous “last stand. {ment he was taken to a hospital in Conduct Classe in Home —jnoon at a luncheon prepared by the| jeave Northfield until ‘Rrenksgiving.| Sweetman furnished teams and ac-| Minneapolis. var Tablet Instruction Courses in training for women in the homes will be opened in Mandan \ Friday afternoon. 4 4 "Glasses with cooking, clothing con- a 44 struction, child care, home furnish- n i, ings, and social culture as subjects » Ag’ . will be held in the home economies room of the high school. Miss Ella Johnson, home economic ‘rom the'extension department of the state agricultural college will be in charge of the instruction, which is tree to all participating. ‘All classes meet once each week for six weeks and cost of food and sup- plies used in all classes will be divid- 2d equally among those in the class. Women attending classes will not be required to study lessons or purchase yooks, Miss Johnson announces. Another group of courses will be- gin Tuesday, also in the high school ‘ \\ \room, The schedule of courses fol- . Glows: :w Friday 2 to 4 p. m.—Clothing construction and selection. 7:15 to 8:15 p. m—Home manage- Lowell Sherman Marion Nixon — Hugh Trevor — George Marion William Janney Says VINCENT BENDIX — President and Chairman of the Board, | Bendix Aviation Corporation of Chicago and New York, operating Bendix Brake Company, South Bend, Indiana; Eclipse Machine Company, Elmira, New York; Bendix Stromberg Carburetor Company, South Bend, Indiana, and other subsidiaries. Directed by LOWELL SHERMAN The guaranteed special patent flours OCCIDENT, LYON’S BEST, OR CLIMAX “Our Money NOVEMBER 17 - 18 - 19 - 20 ment. 8:15 to 9:15 p. m.—Child training. jay 2 to 4 p. m—Meal preparation and table service. 7:15 to 8:15 p. m.—Home furnish- ‘DE hI hy : 4 7 FREE DELIVERY AT YOUR HOME Chicken Mushroom Chow Mein » 2. SLO Plain Chow Mcin with Almonds 3 Subgum Chow Mein .......- Extra Cut American Chop Sucy . White Mushroom Chop Sucy ings. 8:15 to 9:15 p. m.—Social culture. MANDAN CHILDREN “Competition is the life of busi- ness. To win leadership a manu k” guaran- tee is an insurance policy “gS 6 ’ facturer must make his product with every sack. Fresh Tomato Chop Plain Chinese Chop + q more desirable than others. RUSSELL clei hae clas oes iis raain ki "0 : oe JSS. -MILLER ' hincepiuabesySeumet Un) hysOp Chinese Chef, State Health Officials Continue < : 8 Hence there results a great bene- | MILLING CO c - EA a " n | a 2 x b. We Search for Carrier of fit to the public through constant H Be iti BE a Meningitis i coe striving for improvement. The Two Mandan youngsters suffering with spinal meningitis in the Mandan use of the modern Ultra Violet Deaconess hoaisia Bue moreine, howed little change, according to at- * ; fendants, and state health offletals Ray in toasting the tobaccos continued examination of the city’s : fehool children in an effort to locate used in LUCKY STRIKES is an a carrier of the Geyer a The two stricken children are Ern- ” ——\ est Fleck, 10, who became ill Nov. 5, example of such advancement. v » “and Kathleen Sullivan, 7, who was taken to the hospital Tuesday eve- ning. Dr. A. A. Whittemore, head of the state health department, said this morning that between 700 and 800 children of school age have beén ex- amined for both spinal meningitis and diphtheria in the last week. Ex- eminations up till this morning failed to reveal a meningitis carrier. Dr. Whittemore also announced to- day that a strenuous campaign against infantile paralysis, as well as meningitis and diphtheria. is being planned by his department for the’ +. near future. . Dairy Company‘Sues Fred Sommerfield in Everyone knows that sun- First Court Action; shine mellows=that’s why TOASTING M % lar November | jury term frit nur go under | includes the use of the Ultra Violet Ray. way this morning with Judge Thomas ; H. Pugh, Dickinson, iding. F ‘a conference of attorneys ‘nf regard | LUCKY STRIKE=the finest cigarette you to arrangement of cases on the vl’ = @y@er smoked, made of the finest tobaccos calendar was held this morning. The first case of the term was) scheduled. for this. afternoon. The | =the Cream of the Crop=THEN—“IT’S Purity Dairy company. Mandan, is; a — seeking slightly more than $100 from | TOASTED.” Everyone knows that heat ¢ —\ Pred Sommerfield. Mandan. in the i. first . which wi heduled f¢ ‘ 4A frst case. which, was scheduled fo" pypifies and so. TOASTING removes harm- milk bill. Kelsch and Higgins were representing the paintif, nd 1. ful irritants that cause throat irritation and coughing. No wonder 20,679 physicians Commission Finishes | A | Detail Preparatory | have stated LUCKIES to be less irritating! { | To Sewer Area Work > || EVERY EVENING When Lights Go On The sun sinks low on the horizon—shadows fall, and mazakind needs LIGHT. It is on this basic daily need that our securities are ground- ed. And the demand for electric service is growing from day to day—for more Light—for more Power. ‘An investment in our securities has a 24-hour earning capacity, year around. This essential service is a perman- ent guarantee of steady, substantial income through the years ahead. | Let us give you details of how you can buy our : , 6% Preferred Stock on easy monthly payments. Dividends payable every 90 days. Phone 4101 | eo! Approval of City Engineer E. R. 66 99 ‘ 4 Griffin's final cost estimates for sew- | e e er construction in district No, ¢ was I t ’S O as ed Northwestern Public Service Company 7, ctraing owe it Seta ty auditor ASK ANY EMPLOYEE The commisstoners also passed one of the resolution providing for sewer war- 4 rants for the district and another Your Throat Protection — against irritation= against cough guaranteeing payment of any defi- ciency in the district assessments by at 5 - 5 A general taxation. Consistent with its policy of laying the facts before the public, The American ‘Tobacco Vompany has invited Mr. Vincent. i 4 Reports of the city justice and city Bendix to review the reports of the distinguished men who have witnessed LUCKY STRIKE'S tamous Toasting Process. ort a ota OW er Lig t 0 e treasurer were receivéd and read and ‘The statement of Mr. Bendix appears un this page. the commissioners closed the session © 1930, The American Tobacco Co., Mfrs. rs — by approving a group of October bills, | - r . =