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my i i | | ] q _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1981 Potentate Esten A. Fletcher during the national Shrine convention July 14 to 16. At St. Paul the two cars carrying the “Indians” will join a special train, “The Northwest Indian Special,” which will go direct to Cleveland. The Indians will hold their final practice and inspection in the Mandan Masonic Temple at 7 o'clock Thursday evening, according to Col. A. B. Welch, first chief, who 1s shown standing at the left. His Indian name is Mato Watakpe (Charging Bear). Others, standing from left to right, are Anton Olson, Chief of the Wind; Archie Wilkinson, Carries the Message; John Meson, Rain in His Face; B. C. Mohr, Sounding Thunder;.Dr. A. O. Henderson, Kiro Black Bear; Claude C. Turner, Holds the Enemy; L. F. Smith, Many Warriors; Mandan’s Indian Shriners will leave Mandan Friday afternoon in two special Pullman coaches for Cleveland, O., where they will act as escort and bodyguard to Imperial H, M. Hunke, Swift Walker; Ernest “| ~ Mandan Indian Shriners As They Will Look in Cleveland Wilkinson, Black Trail; Sitting, from left to right, are C. V. Caddell, Swift Crow; L. A. Paxton, White Iron; V. O. Matson, Calls the Water; F. W. McKendry, Keeps the Drums; and H. B. Parsons, Holy Other members, who are not in the picture, are Charles Hughes, Ocean Soldier; Holy; William Borden, Chief of the Wind; and W. A. Bagnell, Ancient Lodges; Carl MANDAN NEWS MANDAN FAIR WILL HAVE Bla CARNIVAL Slope Fair Directors Also Book, Vaudeville Acts for Four- Day Entertainment Doddson’s World Fair Shows, one | of the biggest carnivals ever brought into western North Dakota—16 riding devices and 30 tent theaters, five acres of canvas—will be the feature this evening in Riverside park was ordered Wednesday by the Mand: , Salzman, Makes the Lodges; Casey Jones, Holy Stone Lodge; L. V. Duncanson, Shoot on; Peter Berg; W. T. Kraft; W. E. Doty; Al Rosen; and Frank Gage. WOODCOCK WOULD LEAVE DRINKER 10 CONSCIENCE’ PANGS Prohibition Chief Deems It Im- possible to Halt Activities of Private Violator Washington, July 8—(7)—The pri- vate violator of the liquor laws would |be left to his own “conscience and the forces of education” under s pol- icy advocated by Prohibition Director Woodcock. Speaking over the Columbia Broad- casting system Tuesday night, Wood- jcock expressed the belief such prog- ress had been made by his bureau in the last year that eventually it would eliminate the big illicit liquor dealers. The dry chief said commercial vio- lators were caught sooner or later. “No matter how important or oig the offender,” he said, “history shows he is eventually caught. . . . But the pri- vate violator—the consumer —may very probably escape all direct pun- ishment because of the protection the law gives him. We are compelled to leave him to his conscience. The pit of it is that he is the temptcz, the inciter of the commercial violator’s acts.” Woodcock ended his first’ year as prohibition director July 1. He point- ed out that in that period a total of 75,365 cases had been prepared for prosecution in federal and state courts. Of the 58,173 terminated in federal courts, he said, convictions were obtained in 50,334, with 20,372 jail sentences imposed. In addition, F. Smith and Mrs. J. R. Heater, Man- | sul dan; Mrs. Warten Quick, Jamestown, | hotel. and Mrs. H. H. Robbins, Seattle, and | three sons, John, Bozeman, Mont.; | August, New England, N. D., and} Thomas, Seattle. | C. M. T. C. Band Will Give Mandan Concert ing a worthless check to a Mandan TWO GIRLS ARE BORN Daughters were born during the oe in the Mandan Deaconess hos- | pital to Mr. and Mrs. H. Hunke and | |Mr. and Mrs. Gus Sauter, Mandan. | | CONNOLLY AT MINOT | Louis H. Connolly, Morton county) Postponement of the Mandan mun-| state's attorney, motored to Minot! icipal band concert scheduled for, late Tuesday to attend the Northwest | State Fair in the Ward county city. | ian'He was expected back in Manday to-| ATTACK ON VATICAN park board, according to Ralph Law, day. director of the musical organization. | The concert will be given the eve- i ning of Thursday, July 16. |. Montana-Dakota Power company’s ‘A concert will be presented in Riv- team was beaten 19 to 8 by the De- erside park at 7 p. m. Friday by the | Molay entrant in a Mandan Dia- C. M. T. C. band from Fort Lincoln ;mondball league game Tuesday eve- it is announced. \ming. The batteries were: Montana- | |Dakota—Wroolie and Shafer; DeMo- |lay—Dietrich, B. Spielman, L. Spiel- DE MOLAY TEN WINS dian Royal air RESUMED IN ITALY Newspapers Launch Editorial) Shafts; One Asserts Catho- | lics Plotting Revolt | | Weak, Tired... Couldn't Work Rome, July 8.—(?)—Italian newspa- pers have resumed their editorial) campaign against the Vatican, La-| voro Fascista leading the way with a/| charge that the Catholic action or-; tion plotted a counter-revolu- | ion against the Fascist state. \ Popolo d'Italia, edited by Premier) Mussolini's brother, Arnaldo, printed | another editorial supporting the gov- @ coast-to-coast tour. Fargo, N. D., is the next stop. The flight, composed of 27 Cana- force and civilian |pilots and passengers, is a good-will |tour conducted in connection with the Canadian air pageant. The queen bee drops 50,000 eg in her brood cells every three weeks. A tax of about ten cents a gallon he on gasoline in England. Railway Men Hold |man and Toman. Meeting in Mandan , In addition, the fair directors have | hooked a program of vaudeville acts.| Mandan railway employes will at- | hese will be shown each afternoon |tend a mass meeting at 5 o'clock this | and will be combined for the evening | afternoon to promote a pension plan| shows in a Speed Revue in which an/ covering all railway employes. The ensemble of 100 actors, singers, come-| session will be held in Hudson Hall.! attraction this year of the Missouri eed wise at Mandan, July 28, 29, 30 and 31. ernment in its controversy with the! |pope, and relations between the| |} church and state appeared on the Automobile Takes || whole to have reached a point where! ° || negotiations for the moment are ex- Dive Into Creek || tremely aifficuit if not impossible. In government circles it is admitted jresumption of conversations with the} | Holy See is a problem and it is under- An automobile crashed through a bridge railing and dived into dians, gymnasts and musicians will| participate. | “As has been the rule in the last| two years, the 4-H clubs and the Homemakers clubs will have a special incentive to vie for honors. A total of $1,400 has been set aside for cash prizes in events for the boys’ and girls’ club members, $250 being pro- vided by the state and $1,150 by the fair board. The list of free acts includes the Franklin troupe, a sextet of acrobats | and jugglers; the Holland troupe, | presenting a feature, the “Old Haunt- ed Mill’; the Toyame Japanese troupe of nine human jugglers, who | present two different acts; the Dance} Scandals of 1931, modernistic cham- | pions of the poetry of motion; and} the “Revue troupe” of musicians, | dancers and singers presenting an act taken from the “Folies Bergere” of| Paris. | Negro to Have 2nd Hearing in Mandan Howard Kirkpatrick, Bismarck ne- gro, Wednesday was awaiting 2 pre- liminary hearing before James E. Campbell, Mandan police magistrate, | | on a charge of driving an’ automobile \ gc while intoxicated. Kirkpatrick was charged in connec-| tion with an automobile accident; June 21 on the Mandan-Bismarck | highway in which four automobiles figured. Due to confusion at a hearing Tuesday, Kirkpatrick was disinissed by Magistrate Campbell but he was’ rearrested immediately fpon order of Louis H. Connolly, Morton county} state’s attorney. A misunderstanding over the time of the Tuesday hearing caused state witnesses to be late and the magis- trate dismissed Kirkpatrick for lack of evidence. Junior Baseball Drawing is Made Mandan will play Dickinson at 2 p. m. next Saturday in the first game of the annual American Legion dis- trict junior baseball tournamnt at Hebron. : New Salem and Hebron will clash at 4p. m. the same day and the win- ners of the two Saturday games will battle Sunday afternoon for dis- trict. championship. Drawing for the tournament was conducted Tuesday afternoon in the Mandan Chamber of Commerce of- fice, with Clifford E. Arnold, secre- tary of the chamber, William Elli- son, manager of the Mandan team, and Miss Josephine Hess, secretary to Mr. Arnold, officiating. ‘The state junior tournament will be coestacheet at Harvey July 31, Aug. 1 a 3 Former Resident of Mandan Succumbs; Funéral_ services for Mrs. Robert Nell, 83, North Dakota resident for many years, were held in Seattle, ras word the United Scotland, and after a stay in Penn- sylvania moved to western North Da- kota in 1885, They resided at, Sims, N. D., until 1917, when they moved to Mandan. A few years ago they left Mandan to make their home in W. W. Royster, of the Railroad Em- | ployes National Pension Association, | Inc., will be chairman of the meeting! and the chief speaker. { Hazelton Group is Visiting in Mandan Members of the Smith-Hughes agricultural department class of Hazelton high school, their parents and friends were making a tour of inspection at the U.S. Northern Great Plains dairy and field stations) Veterans of State and the state training school in Man- dan Wednesday. . The tour was arranged by Mike Sullivan, instructor of the class; A.! L. Watt, head of the dairy statioi and W. F. McClelland, superinten ent of the training school. PUREBRED SIRE LOANED A purebred Holstein bull, Mandan Paul Friend Segis Pieve—642,405,” has been loaned to the state training school by the U. S. Northern Great Plains dairy station. This is the ninth bull to be placed in service by the federal farm, according to A. L.! Watt, superintendent. The bull will pee new herd sire at the state ool, il | | ARRESTED IN GLENDIVE . John Handtmann, Jr., Morton county sheriff, left Mandan Wednes- day morning for Glendive, Mont., where Harry Chamberlain has been arrested at his request. He expects to return to Mandan tonight with | Chamberlain, who is charged with is-; portion included Fargo, N. D., $1,- 881,900; Fort Harrison, Mont., $2,- 562,212; Sioux Falls, S. D., $2,165,229. Qualifications for Apple creek a few miles east of {| Bismarck, near the James Davis, farm, late Tuesday night when its driver, who has not been iden- [ tified, was blinded by lights. | The machine is owned by H. J. Saunders,’ Fargo, according to J. | P. Kelley, Burleigh county sher- | iff. The sheriff said the occu- pant or occupants apparently es- caped unhurt as the car was right side up when it struck the | creek. Berrow Huge Amount: July 8.—(#)— New| Washington, loans made to veterans since enact. ment of the 50 per cent loan law, totaled $792,436,116, These were made to 2,064,609 vet- erans. on June 27. Pigures for offices in the central) Minneapolis, $7,377,528; | | Citizenship Given | Toronto, Ont, July 8—i)— | Yves Le Cam, Chinese laborer, applied for citizenship. The judge asked him what qualifica- tions he possessed. “House of my own, wife and | family and home brew in the cellar,” said Le Cam proudly. ‘OWEN D. YOUNG’S DAUGHTER WEDS _ Everett Needham, only daughter of on oe and Mra: Neil ‘celebrated thefr |” 63rd wedding anniversary five months |. Meche leaves four daughters, Mrs, Le Resorve bank. ? te ie ang his bride, the former J hine Youn: Young, industrialist are shown leaving the Universalist church in Van Hornegville, N. Y., after thelr wedding ‘4230 eremony. Case is the son of the chairman of the New York Federal “NOW LEAT WHAT stood to be the premier's intention to} delay for a week or two his reply to the week-end papal encyclical “con- cerning Catholic action.” It is understood that the editorials; in Popolo d'Italia and similar news-j| paper articles are part of the gover! ment’s plan to let the people und: stand the state's side of the contri yersy which still centers about the Catholic clubs which have been dis- | solved. The premier is said to regard the dissolution as final and that so far as this part of the proklem is con-: cerned there is no chance for nego- tiations. Airplane Fleet is | | En Route to Fargo St. Paul, July 8.—(?)—Headed by 2 tri-motored flying boat, a fleet of 13 airp!anes left Holman municipal air- port at 9 a. m. Wednesday to continue I LIKE,” POPULAR WOMAN DECLARES One after another, men and women all over the South and West are coming right out in public to tell bers she this rise Poathost to end indigestion and the gas, bloati Beach headaches, etc., it cause, | Just the other day, Mrs. Jewell | Bainbridge, papular owner of “the Browning Hotel, Oklahoma City, Okla., enthusiasti declared At last I have found relief for in tion, I eat what now without fear of that old heavy feeling of stu! or of headaches and | nervousness, “T suffered with indigestion for | many years; tried soda and many other things for it without success. Brent first few ae ot Fane's tap convinced me it was the thing 1 needed. ‘The stufly feeling, headaches and nervousness after Co ust Siappeared. 1 am sure | gral arty friend who got me Pape’s Diapepsin i i Jess; will not form PaaS fo74 box ie ; our drug and next ime somet » chi Of the candy fike tablets. ‘gee how | the burning or pain disappears! If you wish to em before buying, ”* Wheeling, vite “Pape’s Di: f W.Va. tore Pris ea Di a | i \ PAPE'S j i . “J. WAS weak and run down and couldn't work much. Some days Iwas in bed all day... on account of female weakness. “My cousin recommended your Vegetable Compound to me and I began taking it sight away. “I sure feel like a new woman. ‘Work all day and am stronger and feel fine now. “I have only taken 3 bottles but I found relief in the first one I took. I recommend it to any woman who suffers as I did."—Mrs.C E. Hawk, R. R. No, 2, Promise City, Iowa. / Vuh tars Z clin. E. oO VEGETABLE COMPOUND CAPITOL THEATRE Last Times Today 2:30 — 7:00 and 9:00 P. M. 35c until 8 o'clock is JOSEPH M SCHENCK Presests m Taylors VED aRTIOTS PreTeRE ‘Merriest Iove com- edy of them all with “America’s Sweetheart” play- ing a harum-scar- um madcap who 'g 3 calculated to be 11,000 miles in diameter, or somewhat larger. than the earth. A Its distance from the earth was figured at 180,000,000 miles, less than twice the distance from the earth to the sun. Its position was given as in the area —- south of the “snake charmer” con- Kyoto, Japan, July 8—(?)—The stellation. Kyoto astronomical observatory an- nounced today the discovery of a new| Florida raises about 4,000,000 head planetoid. The heavenly body was/of poultry. fines totaling $5,497,566 were iraposed and 6379 padlock injunctions were granted. A total of 31,321 stills and 245 automobiles were seized. Jap Observatory Sees New Planet Quicker, Surer, With Less Effort at Less Cost .. You Can END THE FEARFUL The filthy disease-carrying FEARFUL 7 must go . . . at all costs. But economy dictates the use of FLY- TOX, proven by famous, “Chamber of Death” tests. the surest, quickest-killing FLY ANT, household spray made. Ie ’ is stainless, fragrant, econ- MOTH FLEA mical, your most powerful ‘\ ‘weapon against the pests ROACH BED BUG that invade your home. 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