The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 27, 1931, Page 2

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PA. U. 8, PAT. OFF. By Williams BORN THIRTY YEARS Too SOON” a SRWILLAMS > | Mandan News OOTH ANNIVERSARY OF MANDAN CHURCH T0 BE CELEBRATED Special Program Is Arranged by Presbyterians in Man- | dan for Sunday ° Mandan's Presbyterian church will celebrate its 50th anniversary Sun- day on the eve of the city of Man- dan’s four-day golden jubilee cele- bration. A program for the Sunday services was announced Thursday morning by Rev. H..H. Owen, Flandreau, S. D., pastor of the Mandan church from 1918 to 1925, will preach the morn- ing sermon, which will be followed by a reception for former members of the church and a dinner, served by the Ladies Aid Society, in the church building. At 2:30 p. m. a historical service will be held in the church. Judge; B. W. Shaw and Mrs, L. N. Cary,| among the oldest members of the/ church, will relate historical expe-| riences and reminiscences. Greet-/ ings will be brought from churches} throughout the Bismarck Presbytery | and from pastors of the other churches, in Mandan. Founded in August, 1881 The church was founded in Au- gust, 1881, by Rev. I. O. Sloan, who 1s dead now. Rev. Sloan, familiarly known in Mandan to all denomina- tions as “Father,” came to Mandan in August, 1880, and organized a Sun- day school, which held its sessions in a small log schoolhouse located on what is now Second avenue north- east. When this became crowded the church held its services in a building which was used as a billiard Parlod and saloon. During the big flood of 1881, when the waters of the Missouri and Heart rivers backed up and left water six to seven feet deep in the city, the fur- niture of the church in this building was ruined. Sloan organized the church with the assistance of Rev. C. B. Stevens, Fargo, the initial membership being made up of 10 persons. First officers of the church included Lyman N. Cary, Warren Carpenter, E. F. Doran, Marion A. Vinton, and Charles Wil- liams, none of whom is living now. Built Church in 1882 The first church was built in 1882 on the site where the present church now stands. This wooden structure was torn down in 1916 and in its Place was built the brick structure which is in use at present and which is regarded as one of the finest church buildings in the northwest. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lanterman ar. rived Fa Betas Wednesday to e anniversary program. Mr. Lanterman was chairman of the building committee when the new buliding was erected. They have been living in Los Angeles, Cal. The church has had 13 pastors since its organization, including the following ministers: I. ©, Sloan, 1880-1885; | Rey, Gilbert W. Stewart, pastor. | { Custer Incident Is Depicted in Pageant | Abraham Lincoln in 1873. \1 to play Wednesday afternoon, Bob Charles Wright, Oscar Morck, Edward Morck and Jack Murray. General Custer came to old Fort The fort was located above the mouth of the; Heart river in the Missouri. This romantic chapter in the spec- tacle comes to a close on June 17, 1876, when the Seventh Cavalry leaves the fort on its fatal expedition against the Sioux nation, which was culminated with the annihilation of Custer and his detachment at the Lit- tle Big Horn in Montana. Bob Ridley Reaches Golf Quarter-Finals! Defeating Paul Shannon 2 up and | Ridley advanced to the semi-finals in the annual Mandan city golf cham- pionship tournament. Three other quarter-final matches ; were to be played today or Priday.! | Semi-finals must be completed by/| jSunday, when the championship match is carded. | William Bauknecht, tourney med-| jalist, E. A. Singletary, and Dr. Lloyd Erickson advanced to the quarter- finals in Wednesday matches. Wed-| nesday results follow: | CHAMPIONSHIP FLIGHT | First Round | Bauknecht won from Blair Seitz, 8| and 7. | Singletary defeated James T. Mc-} Gillic, 3 and 2. | Erickson won from Dr. R. D. Row-| | ley, 6 and 5. Quarter-finals \ Ridley eliminated Shannon, 2 and 1./ FIRST FLIGHT | First Round i John Andrews won from Howard! Griffin, 5 and 4. | D. C. Scothorn defeated William Pfenning, 4 and 3. SECOND FLIGHT First Round Abner Jenson won from Frank Ho- man, 2 up. M. T. Bull eliminated Boomer Brooker, 4 and 3. | C. G. Conyne defeated Vernon Ho- | man, 4 and 3. | ' Two Men Arrested By Morton Sheriff Two men Thursday were in the/ Morton county jail in Mandan await- ing preliminary hearings following their arrest by Sheriff John Handt- mann, Jr., Wednesday. taloupes of a new type were adults. Both were being developed to grown in North Dakota with in- creased success, Drawings Made for Mandan’s Net Meet Drawings have been made in the annual Mandan free-for-all tennis tournament. Sixteen doubles teams have entered that branch and 22 have entered the singles branch of the tournament. Play is to be started immediately. The drawings: Doubles: Scott-Roche vs. Stein- brueck - Picker; Murphy Baird-Rooth; Mudgett-Nuessle vs. McDonald-Dietrich; Hubbard- vs. Reed-Geston. Second bracket: Stephens-Russell vs. Pfenning-Arn- stad; Higgins ——— vs, Brinsmade- Orodoff; Tostevin-Sullivan vs. Stew- art-Williams; Spielman ————— Tostevin———_—_—__. Singles: Rooth-bye; Baird -bye; Ellis-bye; Pfenning-bye; Hubbard vs. Russell; E. Tostevin-bye; Stein- brueck-bye; Orodoff vs. W. Tostevin; J. Sullivan vs. Arnstad; Brinsmade- bye; George vs. Spielman; Stephens- bye; Murphy-bye; Williams-bye; Hig- outa Picker vs. Stewart; Paviik- ye. SHEPPARD RITES TODAY Funeral services for Emory R. Sheppard, 72, former Morton county commissioner who committed suicide [ia Fort Rice, were to the Kennelly Funeral dan, this afternoon, with Rev. G. W. Stewart, pastor of the Mandan Pres- byterian church, in charge. HOLD BRIEF MEETING Members of the Mandan city com- mission Wednesday evening held an- other brief regular business meeting, according to City Auditor W. H. Seitz, who said that only routine matters jwere considered at the session. THYSELL. RITES INDEFINITE Funeral services for Henry A. Thy- sell, eight-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. John ©. Thysell, had not been definitely arranged Thursday morn- ing. The boy died Tuesday afternoon following an illness of three weeks, Arrangements are being held up pending word from relatives. eR ee Ne ? At the Movies jj — OO be held from parlors, Man- PARAMOUNT THEATRE Joe E. Brown, who comes to the | Paramount theatre Friday and Sat- urday in “Broad Minded,” the First: National comedy, takes a twelve-mile step in a scene of the sidesplitting Play. On location he is shown run- ning into the door of the Huntington Hotel in Pasadena. The next shot shows him in the lobby of the same hotel, apparently. This scene, how- ever, was taken in the studios at Burbank, twelve miles away. Fea- tured in “Broad Minded” are Ona Munson, Marjorie White, William Collier, Jt. Margaret Livingston, Thelma Todd and many others. Mer- vyn Le Roy directed. CAPITOL THEATRE “Arizona,” one of the most popu- lar and successful stage plays ever written, has been made into a talk- ing film by Columbia Pictures and is bers Monday at the Capitol thea- re. ‘The play is the work of Augustus Thomas, one of the greatest-of pres- ent day playwrights. It is considered the outstanding work of this talented author, and it has had a colorful ca- be|reer on American dramatic boards. The long history attached to this play started in 1899 at the Hamilton Opera House in Chicago where it had its premiere and played for moré than a year with a cast which later became famous—such names as Theodore Roberts, Robert Edeson, Arthur By- ron, Olive May, Eleanor Robson, Ed- | mund Holt and Lionel Barrymore, For over nine years “Arizona” held its grip on the public and it went down in theatrical history as being the most popular play of modern classic. Following its Chicago run, it had an equally successful showing at the Herald Square in New York and then at the Adelphi in London, while several companies presented it simultaneously on the road in the The present library building of con- gress represents an investment of be- 'ys,| tween eight and nine million dollars. Dark red cow, weight about 900 lbs., young, good condi- -” right tion. Brand, “J. hip. GUSSNER’S kite and a key in order The Electrician Since the days when Benjamin Franklin experimented with a to discover the source and properties They were Engelbert Bachmeier, | of electricity, workers in the electrical field have done much to advance the cause of human happiness. The electrician ren- Raleigh, who is charged with Bene | obscene language in a pubile place, | and Joe Klein, St. Anthony, facing a) statutory charge. { ders a service that has grown indispensible to an advanced O.A.CONVERT Distinctive Funeral Service TELEPHONE 304; 112 THAYER AVE. NO TRACE OF VANDALS No trace had been found Thursday morning of the vandals who late Tuesday night or early Wednesday morning nullified four years of ex-| perimentation work with a hardy| type of tomato at the U. 8. Northernj Great Plains Field Station Mandan. | J. M. Stephens, superintendent, be- We Now Offer the Well Known HOOD TIRE At These Low Prices for a Limited Time Hees White aren ant iene ply ply 21x4.40 ........ 95 Shas 21x4.50 |. 79 ©=— 515 19x4.75 875 «595 «7.55 19x5.00 ............. 700 9.65 G30 21x825 |. "7" 855 135 7109.75 32x6 “Truck” 10 ply ......... 32.50 32x6 10 ply 27.75 Hood Tubes Rubber City Tubes from $1.15 to $2.50 from 85¢ to $1.40 Frank E. Leifert Company 10 to 30% Saving on Automotive Service Parts Bismarck, N. Dak. 300 Main Avenue N. Phone 289 é THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1981 Grant New Trial to Fargo Eye Doctors A new trial was granted by the North Dakota Supreme Court Wed- nesday to Dr. John Rindlaub and Dr. Elizabeth Rindlaub of Fargo, against whom a jury in Cass county district court returned a verdict of $29,800. Action was brought by William Hunder in behalf of his minor son, Francis Hunder, of Wheaton, Minn., who alleged that the doctors “care- lessly and negligently” diagnosea and treated an injury to his son’s eye February 6, 1927. The injury resulted while the boy was whittling a piece of wood and plerced his left eye with the blade of a knife. ‘The supreme court, in reversing the judgment of the lower court and ordering a new trial, held that “the defendants did not receive fair trial i" which they are entitled ‘under our awa in appealing to the higher court, the doctors specified errors in five in- stances, Man Is Killed in Canadian Cyclone Regina, Sask., .Aug. 27.—(#)—One man was dead today and two lay in- jured as towns of Estevan and Arcola surveyed the damage done by a which was accompanied by large hail) ‘stones, included a railroad trestle half a mile long, dashed from its piers, two freight cars swept from the tracks; houses unroofed and windows | shattered. Robert M. Henderson, 50,| the dead man, was crushed by wind-| tossed timbers, There are 1341 radio broadcasting stations in the world, of which 611 are in the United States. OT | Decisions of the | Supreme Court [ES eon cat tg —+ ‘appellants, appeal from Dunn -county court ruled that service of notice of expiration of redemption by registered mail on a non-resident owner must show mailing to such owner at his last known postoffice address, mailing to insufficient; also service must made upon the. person to be served. Harry E. McHugh, Inc., plainuftf and respondent, vs. C. D. Haley, de- fendant and appellant, appeal from Ramsey county district court, af- firmed. The court ruled that aban- donment,of an easement or servitude resting in express grant must be es- tablished by clear and unequivocal evidence of acts that are decisive and conclusive. Hudson, Wis., Aug. 27.—(?)—Louis Johnson, 22, Ellsworth, charged with assaulting a 20-year-old woman of Hammond, was in the county jail for safekeeping after a crowd of several hundred persons had threatened vio- lence. One neighbor to another —Have you seen the abso- lutely outstanding Radio Values at Gamble Stores? All the newest features and such unbelievably low The finest to- bacco quality plus throat protection. TUNE. pea Ehe. ee = 411 oh .Y. y Blanche Wilke, plaintiff and re- spondent, vs, Merchants State Bank of Richarston et al, defendants and his last known place of residence ee SuweAnane OE | CROWD THREATENS VIOLENCE oH HONORED BY LEGION . Rapid City, 8. D., Aug. 27.—()—T. Cc. “Cy” Kasper, Brookings, football coach at South Dakota State college, was named commander of the South Dakota American Legion, and Miss Christine Olson, Sioux Falls, was named president of the Auxiliary, at the final session of their annual con- vention. district court judgment for the plain- = tiff, modified and affirmed. The’ 1 | New Fall House Frocks Let us show you the new printed House Frocks, in the latest shades and pat- terns which have just ar- rived for Fall Wear. Our new low price is only $1.95 Bismarck Cloak Shop ‘The Popular Priced Storc 3 doors west of Patterson Hotel LEONARD WOOD, JR., DIES New York, Aug. 27. | —(e)}—Leonard Wood, Jr., son of the late major gen- ral of the United States army, died ‘Thursday in Bellevue hospital of pneumonia. He was 39 years old. Metal Repairs If your car needs sheet metal repairs or replace- ments of any kind, our ex- pert workmen can be de- pended upon to do the work in a way that is sure ‘to satisfy. In our workshop you'll find the very latest equipment necessary for a perfect job. Reasonable prices. DINGLE TOP & BODY WORKS In Rear of Ack’s Radiator Shop Phone 290 606 Main Ave. “TOASTING” expels SHEEP-DIP BASE naturally ®lack, biting, harsh irritant chemicals) present in every tobacco leaf. “They're out— so they can’t . be in!” Every LUCKY STRIKE is made of the finest tobacco leaves the world can offer—the finest from Turkey—the finest from Tennessee, Virginia, Georgia and the Carolinas —the Cream of many Crops throughout the world. But all tobacco leaves, regardless of price and kind, as nature produces them, contain harsh irritants. LUCKY STRIKE’S exclusive *TOAST- ING” Process—a process that mellawvs, that puri- fies, that includes the use of the modern Ultra Violet Ray—expels certain harsh irritants natu- rally present in every tobacco leaf. We sell these expelled irritants to manufacturers of chemical * compounds, who use them as a base in making sheep-dip*, as well as a powerful spraying solu- tion for trees, flowers and shrubs — enough to permit the daily dipping of over 50,000 sheep or the daily spraying of many thousands of trees. Thus, you are sure these irritants, naturally pres- ent in all tobacco leaves, are not in your LUCKY STRIKE. re out—s0 can’t be inf? No wonder LUCKIES are always kind to your throat. °U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Bureau of Animal a, Industry, Order No. 210 “It’s toasted” Including the use of Ultra Violet Rays Sunshine Mellows—Heat Purifies Your Throat Protection—against leritotion—against cough -

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