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“Granbois, who suffered a fractured MEN OF 1917 ARE LAUDED BY SPEAKER L. R. Baird Gives Armistice Day Talk Before Rotary Club Wednesday Rights and privileges enjoyed by citizens of the United States were ob- tained by “the perseverance, sacrifice and suffering of the men of the Revo- lution, confirmed by the men of 1861, and insured by the men of 1917,” L. R. Baird told members of the Rotary club at their Armistice Day luncheon ‘Wednesday noon. No particular state, county, city or hamlet can claim credit for the men of 1917, he continued. “Credit goes to every locality in the United States and to every class, profession and trade. There were 4,800,000 men un- der arms, 2,000,000 of whom were overseas.” Overlook Real Thought Too many are apt to regard Armis- tice day as @ day of amusement, gay- ety, and festival and overlook the fact that it was designated in commemora- tion of the signing of the armistice, Baird said. “North Dakota had over 30,000 men in the service, 18,000 of whom went overseas”; he continued, “12,000 are credited with battle engagements and 1,000 approximately died of wounds and disease. In proportion to popu- Jation, North Dakota ranks second in the United States in number killed in_action.” He gave a brief historical sketch of wars in which the United States par- ticipated. LK. Thompson ,asked the club to support the two benefit shows which will be sponsored in local theaters next week, the proceeds of which will go toward unemployment relief. Will Meet Nov. 20 . Ray Bergeson, president, announced that the club will not meet next Wed- nesday noon but will meet in the ‘World War Memorial building at 6:30 p. m. Friday, Nov. 20, to act as hosts at a dinner to members of Burleigh county 4-H clubs. The club mem- bers will be here on that day for their annual achievement program. Halvor L. Halvorson, Minot, who gave the address of the day on the American Legion patriotic program, 8. S. Boise and Thomas J. Burke, lo- cal Legionnaires, were introduced to the club by Dr. G. M. Constans, who was program chairman. Herman Rabe, Dickinson, was another guest at the luncheon. CONDITION OF RIDING MISHAP VICTIM GOOD Glen Granbois, Thrown From Horse, Remains in Semi- Conscious State The general condition of Glen skull when thrown from a horse near) McKenzie Tuesday, was good Thurs- day morning though he.remained in a semi-conscious condition, his attend- ang physician said. The doctor said Granbois could be roused and would answer questions but then would lapse into an uncon- scious state. Granbois apparently was thrown 35 or 40 feet from the horse he was rid- ing when the animal stumbled in a badger hole, Sheriff Joseph L. Kelley said Thursday following an investi- gation. The injured man, about 20 years old, was employed on the farm of Roy Wildfang and had started out to round up some cattle when the acci- dent occurred. Wildfang had come to Bismarck that afternoon and Gran- bois’ plight was not discovered until ‘Wildfang returned to the farm in the evening and found the saddled horse running about the barnyard. Unable to find Granbois immed- Jately, Wildfang communicated with the sheriff, who immediately sent out 8 request by telephone to farmers in the district to participate in a search. About 100 farmers from the Mc- Kenzie ibaa and Sibley Butte dis- tricts . Sennen not found until 3:30 a, m. Wednesday, however, and had suffered from exposure after lying unconscious on the field for about 13 hours. Mrs. ‘Andrew Voigt, Elbowoods, Dies Here Mrs. Andrew Voigt, resident of| the Elbowoods district for the last 29 years, died in a local hospital at 1:30 a. m., Thursday from heart disease and a paralytic stroke. _ She was 65 years old. Mrs. Voigt, had been in the hospital for the last month, Born April 21, 1868, she was mar- ried to Voigt Aug. 20, 1889. They moved to Elbowoods in 1902, where they engaged in farming. She leaves her husband, seven sons, and two daughters, all of whom were at her bedside when she Guarantee given with every wave. and soll fee William, George, Ed: |, Joseph, Victor, John, and Frank, all living in the Elbowoods vicinity; Mrs. Clara Settler, Halliday; and Mrs, Rose Bosh, Killdeer. Funeral services will be conduct- ed from the Sacred Heart Catholic church at Elbowoods, with Rev. Father Peter, Richardton, : officiat- ing. Burial will be made in_ the Sacred Heart cemetery at Elbo- woods, T0 RESUME INQUEST INTO DEATH OF NESS Coroner’s Jury to Consider Causes of Auto Accident Near Sterling Nov. 2 An inquest into the automobile accident in which Melvin G. Ness, Sterling farmer, was fatally injured Nov. 2, was to be resumed by a Bu leigh county coroner’s jury at 2:: o’clock Thursday afternoon. Ness was fatally injured when the automobile in which he and three others were riding overturned in a ditch one mile north of Sterling early in the morning. He died that eve- ning in a local hospital. The inquest was begun Nov. 3, when the jurors were sworn in and viewed the body, but was continued until two persons injured in the ac- cident were able to testify. Charles Gosney, also of Sterling, and Albert Kusler, Wing, have re- covered in a local hospital sufficient- ly to testify at the inquest. Members of the jury are Fred Pe-| terson, E. B. Klein, and E. A.| Brown. | Carl Beyers, Sterling, the fourth} passenger in the automobile, who es- | caped serious injury, also was to be a witness. Others called were Rob- ert Hudson, first to arrive at the accident scene and who brought the injured men to Bismarck, and doc- tors who cared for the patients. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1981 INFECTION FATAL 10 - GUNG ANESTHETIST Miss Naomi E. Murphy, Resi- dent Here For Year and Half, Dies Thursday Miss Naomi E. Murphy, 31 years old, anesthetist for a Bismarck medi- cal clinic since March, 1930, died in a local hospital at 2 a. m., Thurs- day. Death was caused by an acute in- testinal infection and complications. She had been ill about three weeks and was in the hospital for two weeks, Naomi Evelyn Murphy was born July 28, 1900, at North Stratford, Vt., the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Murphy. She spent most of her early life at Rollingdam, New Brunswick, Canada, to which place {her family had moved. She was graduated from the nur- |sing school at St. Luke’s hospital, Duluth, Minn., in 1923. ‘ Private funeral services will be conducted. at Perry’s Funeral Par- lors at 5 o'clock this afternoon, with | Rev. Walter E. Vater, pastor of the ; McCabe Methodist Episcopal church, |probably in charge. | The body will be taken to Duluth jfor funeral and burial services Sat- ‘urday afternoon. Accompanying the jbody to Duluth will be Mrs. Neil |Patterson, Duluth, an aunt of Miss Murphy, with whom the latter had made her home for several years. Miss Murphy leaves her father and four brothers, Burton, Claude, George, and Raymond, all living at or near Rollingdam, and another brother, Vernon, who resides at Bos- ton, Mass. | In England and Wales, the cost of jeducating a pupil in the elementary {schools has risen in the last few years |from $23.75 to $65 a year. Frederick-James a great display that brings your favorite fur—beautiful- ly tailored—well within your reach at the lowest fur prices Hudson Seal Coats ... 20 years. $195 Russian Pony Coats Sil Iver Muskrat Coats for .... Northern Seal Coats Natural Muskrat $8950 Coats for ... Krimmer Coats . A modest deposit will re- serve any coat, and pay- ments may be arranged to suit your income. Repairing - Cleaning - Remodeling Thursday - Friday Bismarck, N. Dak. And They Said it Could Not be Done Permanent Waves Created With Steam No electricity used; no dry hair, kinks or frizz. Done in two hours! The METHOD that won the GRAND PRIZE at the INTERNATIONAL BEAUTY SHOW, NEW YORK CITY. Public Demonstrations at 7:30 Wednesday of each week, beginning Wednesday, December 2nd THE SUPERCURLINE STEAM PERMANENT WAVE Price Complete—$5.00 and $6.00 There will be a limited number of free waves. INQUIRE Harrington’s Barber & Beauty Shop BISMARCK, N. D. Absolutely the sole owners of this Steam Supercurline in the City of Bismarck PHONE 130 * | Singed Mustache | Leads to Arrest i Minot, N. D., Nov. 12—(P)—Be- | cause one of the pair had a mus- tache which was signed when the stolen machine caught fire, two men are in the Ward county jail in Minot, charged with automo- bile theft. A coupe, belonging to Clayton | Jacobson was stolen in Minot ‘Tuesday morning, and was driven *| $155 Toward Drouth : ,. citation is being continued. | Relief Fund Sent in: Burleigh county’s quota for the —os drive was set at $13,300, most of A tota! of $155.40 toward the Red| Which, however, was to come from Cross drouth relief fund has been | 5, received from rural districts in Bur-| \leigh county by Miss Mary Cashel, jsecretary of the county chapter of |the organization. | ‘rom | work, Five of the 27 solicitors anvointed gi Viet tia jhave made reports on part of their iss Cashel said, and the so! ‘ismarck, Money has been received the following solicitors: Mrs. Ruth Lambert, Arena, $18.15. Tebbo Harms, Menoken, $25. Mrs. H. C. Edgerton, Wing, $4 Mrs, A, L. Garnes, Regan, $: 20. rs Miscellaneous, $4.00. ek, { be Devils Lake, where it caught re. The thieves abandoned the ma- chine, but later the Devils Lake Police arrested Olaf Hanson and John Kostenko, who, according to officers, have confessed theft of the auto. Sheriff R. W. Kenard and Dep- uty Sheriff W. E. Slaybaugh who brought the two prisoners to Mi- not Wednesday night, said Kos- tenko's singed mustache was an | important clue leading to the ap- | prehension of the pair. | Hanson and Kostenko said they | are former sailors and that they came to Minot from Seattle. Kos- | tenko said he once lived near Wilton, N. D. On Hanson’s per- | son_was found a letter belonging | to Jacobson which was in the car when it was stolen. One-eighth of the population of | Alabama is composed of children be- | tween the ages of five and nine years. | BIG COAT SPECIAL Select your winter coat while sizes and colors are com- plete at a saving from 25 to, 33 1-3. Sarah Gold Shop. | mene lication — when applied Pleats every hour for 5 hours, A. 0. U. W. Members Don't forget that a good time is in store for you at the masquer- ade and carnival dance tonight, November 12th, at the I. O. O. F. hall, For members and their guests. Good music and lunch. 5c per couple Extra Ladies 250 Women’s and Misses’ Sizes. Best Fall shades. 111-113 Fourth Street Now... ask for ( aymode Silk Hose No. 460 is SHEER! New French heel and curved cradle foot are silk-plated. Smart picot top. “SEPTICEMIA is SERIOUS! ++. serious indeed, perhaps ccippling, sometimes fatal! Help Keep out virulent *Septicemia pus germs with Band-Aid, the ready prepared bandage. Be prompt—use Band-Aid at once, even before you call your doctor... it’s the little, minor, unattended hurts that so often “go septic” with frightful results. Always be ready with Band- Aid split second protection ;. ; have it on hand in your car and office as well as in your home! ‘New Brun +f NJ. Di soni swicl <Septicemia—That Drea long-haired furs to marvel at! Full-Fashioned Only at Penney’s 79° Bismarck’s Busiest Department Store Smartly Furred Winter New rough: New wide wrap-over front! New fitted waistline! Band-Aid beings first aid to your fingertips. Each conven. ient slim tin contains six small and two large strips of tight- sticking adhesive plaster with alittle gauze pad attached. Two styles, plain of mercurochrome pds Big brothers te Band-Aid are shese famous surgical and home Red Cross Absorbent Cotton— Zo and Zonas Adhesive Plaster —Red Cross Gauze and Bandages. AT YOUR DRUGGIST RED CROSS PRODUCTS (Pronounced Sep-tee-sec-me-ah) You can’t do finish woolens! And the furs! Flat furs — flattering ... all of much great- er beauty and quality than usually found on coats at this price! Nicely lined — warmly interlined the full length. Yes, these coats are values, Other New Fall Coats at $9.90 to $59.75 For Smart Economy! Bismarck, N. Dak. | Battery Sale! Equip now CALIFORNIA COMBINATION wave, with a new battery for winter driving. 13-plate $4.25 and up exch. price, GAMBLE STORES TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY | the ideal permanent. Spiral top,| croquinole ends. Now $5.00. Sham- poo and set included. California Wave Nook, 102 Third street, Bis-| marck. Phone 782. C TEXACO MOTOR OIL @ grade for every car—for every season “Of course, it’s Schilling’s” If everybody preferred + Schilling Coffee! --but what’s the use, that’s asking too Z much of Providence. So some prefe fe one, and some another. But there res : main a surprisingly large number of people not quite content. If that includes * you--try, once again--try, Schilling this time--at our risk, Pos- sibly it is the one coffee you have sought--possibly, not. If not, just *phone your grocer. He will return’ your money instantly. We pay, him! You keep the coffee. Coffee That is not a casual advertising offer. It is 7 pedeaen printed on every tin of. Schilling Schilling coffee. And frankly we are occasionally called upon. But isn’t a coffee supported with such confi-' dence worth a trial, in a quest_so important? Schilling coffee SCHILLING Si’ ZG OLDEN ANNIVERSARY 50 =F, YEARS COFFEE » Baking Powder » TEA » SPICES » EXTRACTS