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The Bismarck Tribune closed and there were isolated bank) An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune ly, Bismarck, N. D., and en-) THE, TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JULY closings in Rumania and Switeer. land. Communistic agitators find this) situation ripe for their schemes. It is! easy to find converts to their policies, now and the communistic press con-| tered at the postoffice at Bsmarck as|tains scare headlines to the effect | Second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year........$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- marck) “ Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck)............+ Daily by mail outside of North Dakota 1.20 Weekly by mail in state, per years1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three years ..... Pere eters 2.50 Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year . . 150 ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year ..... tesueaddas E08 seeeeee 2.00 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this news- paper and also the local news of! spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other | matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS | va regen Ps bis | Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOS™ON| Back Rate Increase Insurance companies, banks and) other financial institutions have filed| briefs with the Interstate Commerce! commission supporting the petition of the railroads for a 15 per cent in- crease in freight rates. The legal] status of many millions of the invest-/ ments of these petitioners are en-/ dangered, it is said, unless some relief} 0o|in various German industrial enter- that the workman's wages are en-| !dangered. | The United States is vitally inter-| ested in the stabilization of Central) Europe and _ especially — |More than a billion of public and |private capital is invested in German |bonds and securities and it is roughly estimated that more than three ot-| {lions of American capital is invested) prises. | Hope rests chiefly in the stability vd] ‘the Bruening government. If that) |collapses before remedial measures) |are effective, it is hard to foretell how |the storm will be weathered. The! present impasse is @ severe test for| the Centrist party. All credit ar-) rangements naturally must turn up-! on the ability of that regime to keep! the German people in line. A Fine Organization More than 600 boys and girls with a smattering of parents and guard-; fans descended upon Bismarck Tues-| day. They were, a fine lot of young-| sters, keen and deeply interested in! what they saw. These young Amer-| icans are members of the 4-H clubs} of Burleigh county and their hosts; were public-spirited Kiwanians who,| in a fine way, showed the boys and) girls that their efforts are ap-; preciated. It was an inspiration to see mem-/ bers of the 4-H clubs studying local industrial plants and public buildings. | Terrific heat did not deter them or) dampen their enthusiasm for enter-} tainment and instruction. | The Tribune company was proud to) entertain them in its plant, and a more orderly, better-disciplined group is given the railroads. | Interests filing the brief represent) holders of some $5,000,000,000 of rail-| road bonds or about one-half of the) $10,783,065,000 outstanding at the} close of 1930. Petitioners point out “the radical) impairment in the margin of safety) of interest on railroad bonds in the! past year and a half would so seri- ously affect the public interest that) the institutions represented deem it) incumbent on them to present the situation fully and frankly to the commission. “Unless and until these conditions, are corrected so as to improve the element of safety in railroad secur- ities, they may not feel justified, in view of their obligations to their de-/ pesiiors Or policyholders, in making | further investments in raliroad bonds, | except in those cases where the fixed charges of the particular road are| amply earned.” ! Railroads are finding it hard to; raise money upon the present show-| ing of earnings. Few of them are in a position to issue additional bonds secured by first liens. Such a situation means curtailment of operation, inability to keep up wage scales and reduction in the pur- chase of new materials. Decline in rail revenue and credit has undoubt- edly had a direct as well as indirect effect upon general economic condi-/ tions. | The action of the insurance and Fall banking interests indicates the ram-|cabinet member will be eligible for) ifieations of the present credit situa- tion. It is possible to endanger the! in 10 months. i stability of many enterprises when) the earning power of great rail sys-| tems is curtailed. The process of ad- justment is most difficult and in- tricate. Many rail experts are not 60 :re an increase in rates will solve) their troubles. This move for in-| creased rates may be followed by the; practice of operating economies all) down the line even to a reduction in| ‘wage scales and elimination of many burdensome regulations which are now in effect. Germany’s Plight Factions in Germany are not in| accord as to the procedure of the| republic in carrying on and working, out her social redemption. | The established regime, which 1s) virtually a dictatorship under the leadership of Hindenburg and Chan-! cellor Bruening, seeks to meet the| obligations of the Versailles treaty as) best it can. Communists would re-) pudiate war debts and committments! through revolution, as did Russia,| while Hitler's followers would seize| the rule “to stamp out bolshevism.”| ‘This bitter factional strife within Ger-| many makes the present crisis more acute. France opposes any loan to Germany which does not contem- plate political pledges from the Hin- denburg government. France views with alarm the entente with Austria, as reflected in the proposed customs union. The French also look with disfavor upon Hitler, the League of | planned is a kind of financial sani- Ex-Service-Men, and other nationalist societies which savor of Fascism. Concerted action of world powers Hlems of printing. The same was true} at the Western Baking Coe | ee has just about forgotten the most sentimentally tragic and wist-} |fully romantic heroine of its early days. |from generation to generation after! Such contacts with our neighbors; the Revolutionary war. The grav: |Their admiration of the new court | New Mexico a dollar a day as long as | confident is clear enough proof of the! jremedy obviously indicated for a find. They threaded their way through the publishing plant peering’ about the many machines and show- ing an interest in some of the prob- house and Memorial building was voiced in unstinted praise. on the farm are valuable, They do} | gone ve tg Ne the sights of New/young English girl who ran off to ‘ork. uri rips were routed to| america with a dashing army |include it in their itinerary. Millions! orricer, i came pl gered York of tears have fallen at the recitation! of the story. ssigaas without benefit of wedlock. After a | Today, stenographers from Wall|time, due to social and army involt Street, dressed in gay summer attire,| ments, the young officer found it im- nibble at sandwiches as they stroll through the historic. Trinity church-|POr@nt to move his heart-torn sweet- |yard.. "They chatter to each other of|NeArt to a secluded plage in the coun- wilh Gilbert Swan over-Sunday romances at the beach;|try. There he would visit her from of boys and girls would be hard to! New York, July 18—The sextons of Of dance dates and theater invita-|time to time, furnishing money for old Trinity Church, in lower 2 way, will tell you of white-hair grims who still come to ask about the |flat stone slab that marks the grave |of “Charlotte Temple.” : Their number decreases each year.) ‘oad- tions from their “boy friends.” her support. ‘Meanwhile, too, he had pil- , “Charlotte Temple,” of the old, old arranged for her to be tutored and tale, knew no such happy moments.| Prepared for the station of his poten- Hers was one of those tear-stained | tial future wife. lives of the pre-Laura Jean Libby va-| Meanwhile, also, a charming young riety. jlady of the Colonial society set had ae & lcome along a8 an excellent marital The creator of “Charlotte” was one| Prospect, and poor Charlotte became Susannah Rowson, of Plymouth, Eng-;More and more neglected. However, land, and the book was based on the|he continued to send money to her true story of another girl of very/and some kind neighbors, hearing her similar name. sad story, had become sympathetic The story was that of beautiful/@nd helped her at a time when she Hers was a story that passed not come often enough. In such in- formal meetings many differences are| ironed out and new and valuable im- pressions of the problems of the city and the farm are secured. The 4-H clubs are doing a valuable work in the farming communities.! Bismarck can do nothing better than support these boys and girls to the! limit. . Their visit was greatly enjoyed by the citizens of Bismarck who were fortunate enough to be able to act) as their hosts for a few hours. | Would Substitute for Fall | At least a score of persons have | fered to serve Albert Fall's term for him if such a substitution is possible.| A wheat farmer in Kansas wrote that} under present conditions he could) easily make the sacrifice and a Min-; nesotan would serve the sentence if} the mortgage on his farm is paid. | The federal government will pay! is incarcerated. The former) parole in four months and for release | Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. published without regard || to whether they agree or disagree |/ with The Tribune's policies. Facing Realities | (New York Times) | Chancellor Bruening’s appeal to the) German people to remain calm and! feeling of panic which has been} sweeping over Germany. A nation is not besought not to lose its head un- less it has shown alarming signs of doing so, The case is evidently not| alone that of the withdrawal of for-/ eign capital from German banks. Millions of Germans have themselves | taken fright and rushed to regain their funds. They can hardly be blamed for dreading a suspension of gold payments and an indefinite deprecia-! tion of the mark. The German gov-! ernment has. perceived the danger of| allowing these apprehensic 1s to con- tinue or become more intense. Chan- cellor Bruening speaks hopefully of} the efforts to draw from abroad large; and long-term credits. This is the) desperate disease. But the disease it- self is German. | Never before, however, was the peril so great of a financial infection spreading from one country to an-]} other. This is the second reality thrown up before all eyes by the Ger- man crisis. It is not now a question of Good Samaritans going to the re- Nef of Germans who have been beaten and left half dead. What is Coen ee LM Me nn tation for Germany that will tend to keep other people in health. tend credits to Germany may be de- scribed as a strictly business opera- tion, as necessary for the other cen- tral banks as it is for the Reichsbank itself. Hence the keen interest with which President Hoover must be lis- tening to the counsels and proposals. of American bankers. It is easy for of the treasury SNORE onc a TT place where people lived simply and frankly, where there were’ no plots jor underhand affairs, Clive turned the car into a little lane. Stopped the engine. “Look, child,” he said, “let's talk | this thing out. You find the world ;Tather a rotten place, don’t you?” | “Sometimes,” agreed the young ered | girl, faintly. begs 4 “Well, it is and ft isn't. Your ense of balance has been upset a little because you were thrown sud- denly among sophisticated people before you'd actually grown up. I could see that, first off.” night.” | “I don’t Ike. her.” Tressa’s green eyes narrowed. “Muriel’s all right, She belongs, at any rate. Clever little baggage to have snagged Van Robard for her own. He's filthy with money.” “Van's mother was a fascinating woman,” Fanny sighed, reminis- cently. “I saw her at Newpert when I was in pigtails. Beautiful creature she was, All the men were mad about her. She was Robard’s second wife, you know. Van wasn't his -son.” “Oh, I didn’t mean that!” Tres- sa, shrugging out of her frock, LIAN 2 ARRETT, 18 and tove- ty, is glad Y to leave New York MID, young police officer,-comen to tell Liane that the man who | had been shot in a spenkeasy party given by MURIEL debutante, Linne mects V nd CHUCK DESMOND, vel heileved to huve clopeds ELSIE MINTER, the company in “You saw—what?” murmured 2 paused, looking interested. Muriel has been announced they'll Liane, astonished at the young) “#19 adcpted Van legally. Van's go through with it!” xsl GH. She finds CLIVE CI cane eee T never thought) father was a nobody. Artist or| “Adele had better marry that girl News comes of Muriel fecal alr 4 something of the sort. He left/ off and quickly, too,” Fanny replied, Bagement to Robard. Li Thine “hee, mother” ta Millie without a penny and she married Dirk Robard within the year. Clever girl.” Fanny yawned. “All this happened when Van was a baby, I suppose?” Tressa said casually. “Not a bit of it, Van was in prep school. Millfe’s people put him through I believe. But they were stoney most of the time. Dirk and Millle were married just before the war—in 1913, I believe. You were too young. You wouldn’t re- member. But there was a lot of hewepaper talk. She stopped. “Newspaper talk?” Tressa asked, her curiosity sharpened by an evasive quality in her sister's voice. “What about? It wasn’t a terribly Unconventional match, was it?” “Oh, no. Millicent was a Brad- shaw. Baltimore saciety — the finest. That wasn’t it.” Fanny glanced at the door uneasily. “I hate to talk about it. Eva might H's Short laugh sounded rather offended. I noticed,” he said grimly. “I saw more than you thought. This may sound foolish and all that but I sort of wanted to protect you, You're too pretty to be running around loose. Goblins’! get you. That's why this engage ment of ours would be a shield, @ protection.” The girl at his side was silent. “Don’t you agree?” She was thinking of a dark, troubied face. Of strong hands touching her with a touch that trembled into flame. Protection? Was that, after all, what she wanted? “Yer fe to marry Clive, NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XX MAP BERE'S just one thing I'd like to ask you,” Liane said sud- denly. The car was running along smoothly under the wet elms. The damp, autumnal wind blew her bronze hair in little ringlets across her cheeks, In the fitful light of the road lamps her young face looked strained, somber. Yes, of. course, you're she said-after an instant. “Let me tell mother tomorrow,” Clive urged. He put his foot on the Starter. The engine raced, sput- tered into life. 2 “That girl wiil hate me,” Liane come in. She often does for a late “What's that?” Clive Cleespaugh| sald suddenly with apparent. ir] chat or " wanted to know. He took a packet| relevance. “Don't be an fdfot,” Tressa of cigarets from his pocket with] “What girl? Oh, Tressa?” Clive! snapped. “She'll ok and then his free hand, reached for the pat-| laughed. “Does e matter?” you can chatige the gubjeet. Any- ent lighter which, among other} “I don’t kaow. Your mother may| how, why should Eva mind?” ornaments and gadgets, bestrode| think so. Your mother may have] “irk and she were great friends the instrument board. In the flare Liane’s eyes sought his face as he drew in a draught of fragrant smoke and expelled it gratefully. “It's about Elsie Minter,” Liane explained. “I thought somehow — last summer I got the impres- sion—” She was embarrassed. She could not formulate the words. Clive turned toward her, his teeth flashing whitely in his still tanned face. “That Elsie and I had a case on each other?” he finished for’ her, with a note of amused incredulity. “Yes. That was it.” Now that! " “yuch better,” sh . the thing was said Liane felt! she rushed past the ttle room emall and school-girlish. After all.) without a glance. She world not it was none of her business. Just] give ‘Tressa Lord the sat that she didn’t want anyone burt.| of thinking she cared! . Elsie, least of all. She was es aS brusque, but she was above all, yawned —_indolently,. kind. ai stretching her lovely arms if & ‘Oh, she must have been string-| gesture purely feline. The lace fell gee Ciise sald, ot Cle! away from her shoulders, Her you know—surely you mui closed have! that she and Vernon are|Sccs °Ze8 opened | wide, plans—" Liane paused. “She may,” Clive agreed grimly. “But my plans and Mother's gel dom match. You may have noticed that.” The lights of Wildacres gleamed now through the trees in the Jane: “Head better?” he asked, helping her from the car. With the clasp of that firm, lean hand Liane felt # sudden and ua- accountable ‘lightening of hpart. She could not have said why but she was somehow happier, more assured than she had been 10 min- utes ago, And Millie was a distant cousin. You know hew she is about her friends and family. Touchy as the deuce. “Well, tell me anyhow,” persisted Tressa. “I'm dying of curiosity.” Fanny 1 forward. “Dirk Robard had been married a few years before,” she said solemnly. “It all came out in the newspapers when he married Millie.” “Well, what of it?” Tressa wanted to know. “What had happened?” “The girl was beautiful everyone said,” Fanny explai “I never saw her tut~ Aunt did and said she was a faving, tearing beauty. Then suddenly she dropped out of sight. No one knew where or why, Dirk, went abroad for a year. The rumor Was that she had @ied but when he married Millie Bradshaw the papers unearthed a @ivoree, Divorces were more or less news back in 1918.” “They still are,” Tressa said adrily. e RESSA style again. She looked like a lovely,| “Anyhow Van came into a good| she prophesied as she kissed her to be married as soon as he gets! sleepy cat. thing,” Fanny went on with relish.| sister goodnight. “I may have his decree?” He reached over and| “That Barrett “He is sole heir to that enormous| some ideas you don’t even suspect patted her hand. “I was the old| ening, mind you," Pan-| fortune. Millie Gied.in 1920, a year| on this marriage business.” smoke screen, I suppose,” he added,! ny Amberton who reclined on the|after Dirk. They left ‘him every- dryly. “Vernon's wife was snooping’ chaise longue. thing.” a all; She. w: ground for, evidence... thought), “Your imagination works over- ES one it smart to pretend a fMir@ition with| time, darling,” Fanny answered press sat down at the dressing | marvelous, chick,’ “me! a: lazily. “She's ‘a more’ child ‘and| ~ table concentrating on'bor sleek | me what “Oht” Liane felt suddenty ax|rather » well-behaved one, I thisk. immense distaste for all this in-|At least she doesn't shout and trigue. She wanted to go some'scream way Muriel did to- skin. Little and bottles yielded up their contents.to supplement her beauty. i young man thereafter wandered the earth, a morose and melancholy soul. All of which became one of the best sellers—some 25,000 copies being sold) in the colonies alone. For many gen- erations, the grave bore the name of the real-life figure, after whose story the book was fashioned. But as the centuries passed, many things hap- pened to the original Trinity church- yard. The name on the atone was changed and a metal plate marked the resting place of “Charlotte Temple.” It became one of the most famous graves in all America. One day some ghoul stole the metal mark- ef, leaving a slight depression in the stone slab. Here, for many years, sextons of the church left flovers: from the church. fi But visitors are few in these days,’ and the heroine of America’s oldest sentimental tragedy is being slowly forgotten. GILBERT SWAN, TODAY IS THE- ANNIVERS SHIPPING LOSS STATEMENT On July 18, 1917, » dispatch from a Press correspondent in London an- nounced that the “loss of ships by submarines totaled 1,600,000 tons a month, or from two or three times the total of new construction.” ‘Though the submarine situation, as evidenced by the above announce- ment, was growing more and more serious, Admiral Lacase, French minister of marine, felt more optim- istically about it. He said: “It is true we are suffering con- siderable losses, but every month in- creases our certainty of being able to repair them. Furthermore, we are in large part in a new construction will be taken by the United States. “The shipbuilding already under way, the effect of which will natural- arte Liane ee “Good. story,”-she observed, pat- ting in some creamy e¢oloréd un- guent. need a penny of it is going to step into all that money,” Fanny mur. mured. ; “Do you think so, really?” Tressa asked cryptically. Fanny stared. “Why Tressa Lord, whatever are you driving at?” Tressa laughed. countered evasively. ly not so naive as to believe that just because his engagement to {She's one of the naughty post-war children these dreadful young men are always writing books about.” ‘Tresea yawned. “Well, if anyone writes a book about Muriel Ladd don’t ask me to read it, please, I'd be bored to death. These bad brate who think up shocking things to say weary me.” “You were born seven years too early for that sort of thing,” Fanny observed with satisfaction. Tressa stood up, winding the sleek folds of her robe about ber lovely figure with an impatient movement. “Don’t remind me ef my senior ity,”"she urged, a rasp in her voice, “You know I didn’t mean to do that,” Fanny said amiably. ‘Tressa ror over the fullskirted table, her eyes opened I’m rominded of it entirely too of- ten,” she said with bitterness. “I’m still on the block and Muriel has had a bidder, Don’t rub it in.” chances. It isn’t as if—” ‘With an impatient gesture Tressa interrupted. “Ob, I know, I know! You've given me every advantage. Let Her Her long hands were clenched at her sides. Fanny attempted to head off the tentrum which threatenéd. beautiful enough,” she said, “to land anybody. bg I think, You say things & ment Bride. You Rever lose a cl to be biting.” my and I'm vinegar. Is that what you mean’ . “Tn Vm tired of this conversation. clear out and let me get my beauty sleep.” ‘Tressa was mollified. Her mer curial ly only be felt after a certain time, is MABEL “And Muriel Ladd who doesn’t “Van's had affairs before,” she “You're sure- leaned nearer to the mir dressing wide. “Well, Her sister said, “You've had not go over all that again.” beautiful mouth was twisted. “You're But you're too ‘wound Tressa frowned. “You always that. You're milk and water Fanny refused to be annoyed, sleepy,” she said softly. wand temper abated. “Btop worrying, 014 lady. one of these rn ® position to stand these losses, as | cl: oe © BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Eéitor, Journal of the Medical Reoent resea erred on any nt oh on in mi institutions hes indicated anew the importance of minerals in various food substances. These minerals are concerned primarily with the bulld- ing of blood, but also with other pro- ceases of growth and repair in the human body. Not only iron and cop- per are important, but there seems to be some question as to the exact Lardst played by manga-ese, zinc, ‘kel, and other metals. i‘ Investigators in the University’ of ‘Wisconsin found that the addition of copper to the diet was of great im- portance in rebuilding blood in anemia. Investigators in India and elsewhere believe that manganese 1s of importance in improving growth and that it, as well as copper, is con- cerned in the development of hemo- globin, or red soloring matter, in the blood. Because of these facts investigators in the University of Wisconsin have recently been making a study as to the-amounts of these elements avail- ‘able in various food substances. They find: that 10 foods are particularly high in their manganese content. ‘These are blueberries, whole wheat, Daily Health Service : Containing Foods Help Build Blood, | .. — Survey Shows * * * Oysters, Liver, Pork Contain Amounts of Mineral split :eas, navy beans, chocolate, beet greens, bananas, kidney beans and chard. Copper varies froin @ very small amount in celery to @ very high amount in calves liver. Foods that contain good amounts of copper are oysters, beef liver, mushrooms, our rants, chocolate, split peas, pork liver and lobster. Ten foods particularly high in iron are beef liver, spinach, lima beans, calves liver, navy beans, lean beef, chard, watercress, kidney ~ beans and oysters. It is obvious from these facts that anyone who eats a widely varied diet with good quantities of the various meats, fruits and vegetables that have been mentioned will get all of these essential minerals that he is }- likely to need. ‘The average daily in- take of any of these metals needs be relatively slight. It reaches barely more than one-hundredth of * gram a day for any one of them. The aver> age daily intdke of six families in- dicated that the amount taken daily by any individual would be for manganese 2.39 milligrams; for cop- per 2.26, and for iron 15.46. ‘The important fact is to realize the value of these minerals in blood building and to see to it that the dally diet contains plentiful quantities of the foods that have been mentioned. @fteat enough to replace the highest average of destruction the submarines are likely to reach. “The curve representing the ton- nage sunk does not mount steadily, but rises and falls. We know, too, that the Germans find great dif- ficulty in obtaining trained crews for submarines.” FIRST LUTHERAN Corner Ave. D and Seventh St. Rev. E. Benzon, Pastor Buaday school and Bible ‘and Third Rev. D. Pierce-Jones, Rector 8:00 a. m.—Holy communion. 11:00—Morning prayer and sermon. The religious instruction for the children will bi iscontinued for the remainder of tl immer, BION EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN (Missour! Synod) 419 Fourth Street . V. Richert, Pastor Services for the seventh Sunday after Trinity: 10:30 a m.—Morning worship (Ger- ‘he pastor will conduct at Baldwin. There will no evening services, MeCABE METHODIST EPISCOPAL al .m, Organ Prelude, “A Br of Laven- ler” (Préston), Miss Ruth Row- ley, organist. Anthem, “God Shall Wipe Away All Roma). “Wistful” (Friml). Powell. , selected, Sermon, Rev. W. A. Baker, B marek (N, 'D.: "God Is Light” (viewed from a Biblical and sci- entific standpoint). QFeaN postlude, “March” (Solty), Sunday school, '12:00 noon. (C! asses | for all ages.) Evening worship, » § p.m. Organ prelude, ' “Adagio” (Schu- mi ann). Anthem, “Voice in the Wilderness” (Scott), Organ otfertory, “A Bummer Idy1" ry {Roghleder). Solo, “Beyond the Dawn” (Sander- 6on), Mrs. John Larson. . A. Baker, Bi ‘God's Glory Post “Tempo de Marci eyninger) Prayer service Wednesday at 8 p.m, FIRGT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Floya Logee, Minister F Kindergarten, _pri- mary, junior, intermediate and senior eee of the Sunday church 10:30—Morning service of worship. Organ prelude “Andante Con Moto” eethoven-Batiste), Anne Hurl- , but Peterson. Vocal solo, Henry Halverson. Offertory,'“Prayer in D Fiat” (Warner). (Marston-Lynes), M: Sand! Bavendick, Mai in, Gr orris, Sermon, Rev. William C. Snider, Fargo, exocutive ‘secretary, board national missions, synod of North , akota, ‘Organ postlude, “March in G* (Smartt), = 8:00—Bvening service of worship. Organ prelude, “Vesper Time” (PI ‘lueger-Heartz), Anne Hurlbut Peterso1 ars ery, ertory” (Ne 5 Sermon, Rer wiaen fr, anides, Organ postlude, “P: iB Wlat Major" Coach’ Poste Weaneed 1:30—MId-week prayer service, pea 3 ‘oun: People's Christian Endeavor. Soclety of Fi 'IRST BAPTIST nee Street ana Avenue B Bismarck, North Ellis L. Jackson, 6 a. m., the church The uain ‘class for you! Thi ferak ye ae adult Superinte: enietcabes) lorning worship. Esther Ison, gio” (Moxa: rt), "Consolation Gitendel- > “Tony's Sacrifics Sermon th ay 1 ree Di es) Rr age for Bach of Them. 8 Dp. mT! ‘ening service, ing wi 1 u iiles “alneeuarlte Kennsdy > per hymn, Tana eta Ma ing? Lowell Mason). stig dia ei, ‘ate 1e Parable of the fow- Senior Young Peop! | Mrs. Lester Brown and soclety meets directly after the eve- ning service in the church auditorium for a short worship period with dis- cussion of the topic. Program of about 30 minutes. You are invited to attend the regular services of our church, - Wednesday at 8 p, m.—Mid-week service at parsonage. The Place of Jesus Christ in the thought of the writer of the book of revelation—Revelation, 5th chapter, | The mid-week service is open to all | friends of the church, TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH Avenue A at Fourth Opie 8. Rindahl, Pastor cordial welcome awaits at Trin- ity, Church school, 9:45 a. m Morning worship, 11 ————— Quotations i f |. We must not be-misled by the claim + that the source of all wisdom is in the ;overnment.—President Hoover, * ek * Colleges in this country teach everything but style—Frank Crown- inshield. m, ** # American businessmen and leaders jare emotional and would rather be depressed than find a way out of the | depression.—Sir Charles Higham, *e # Everywhere agricultural countries are being forced into bankruptcy be- cause they are asked to pay in gold that they have not got, instead of the goods they have—Arthur Henderson, British foreign secretary. BARBS |” —_____» Henry Ford is reported using can- taloupes to make paint. The colors should be in good taste, | * # # _ Philadelphia sleuths, says a news j item, are accused of snooping around in navy uniforms. The better to in- vestigate the city's dives, perhaps. * 4% % o Cards have become so universal a pastime that the old nautical ex- pression should be revised to read: “All hands on decks.” + * 4% A good golfer, says the office sage, known by the clubs he belongs to, xk % ‘This is the time of year graduates decide not to allow their college edu- cation interfere with their chancés of getting a job. me xk * ‘There is many a stop aii road to success. een et i Painted Woods | By MRS. OLE LILLEFJELD oral Nelson was a Wilton caller ay. Mrs. Andrew Nelson and son Anton called at the Lillefjeld home tare lay. ~ Fred Peterson has been doing some Plowing for Einer soderquish Mrs, William Brown, Mrs. Lester Brown, son Marian, and Mrs, Ole seca and daughter Mary Ann ni lay. afters ‘3 oy, Nelson. home. eas ir. and Mrs, Harold Soderquist and children spent Wedni home of Harold’s mother see 5 Mrs. John Kiefer of Wilton and” ue, ee yee and son George arck spent, ‘iia Brown homes Ooms vin Lange stopped at the home on his way to town Fiiuay Mr. and Mrs. Prank Erickson and son Ernest left just before the Fourth for the Black Hills, They expect to visit ene Park and several of interest, Mr. and Mrs, Emil children called at the Harold Boat bd and Ole Lillefjeld homes Sun- sy. Mr. and Mrs. William ‘Brown and 4 son Spent Sunday eve Brown home, vee a a ee lel a es FLAPPER FANNY Says: = | q » 134 v “ @ % ¥ tea