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" Varied Program. Given At High School Party A basketball game, exhibition box- ing and tumbling matches and a pro- gram of musical numbers and lowed by a tumbling exhibition by Nick: Mildenberger and Jack An- songs in costume. Mary Mahiman played a piano solo er, @ violin solo by Walter Zimmer- man and solo tap dances by Marian Pederson and Alice Fox, concluded the program. Accompaniment for the vocal numbers and dances was two-steps and other novelty numbers featured the program. Chaperons for the affair in addition to the class Sponsors, Miss Rita Mur- A large group of parents attended the program and remained for the dancing. se % R. K. LeBarron to Wed Former Bismarck Girl Announcement has been made by Colonel and Mrs. George H. Russ, Jr., Fargo, former Bismarck residents, of the engagement of their daughter, Miss Elizabeth Anne, to Russell K. LeBarron, Minneapolis, son of Mr. and Mrs. 8. O. LeBarron, 810 Rosser avenue. The wedding is planned for sometime in April. . Miss Russ is a niece of Captain I. P. Baker and a granddaughter of Mrs. Anna Barnes of this city. Mr. LeBarron was graduated from Bismarck high school and from the ‘ forestry department of the University of Idaho, Moscow, Idaho. At present he is connected with the federal forestry service and is stationed at the University of Minnesota. * oe * Mrs. Donald 8. Snyder, 1002 Fourth St., has as her guest for a week or longer, her mother, Mrs. W. H. ‘Brownawell of Moffit. ** Mrs, E. H, Edson, Moffit, is here to} spend about two weeks as the guest of her sister, Mrs. J. L. Hughes, 519 Eleventh St. ee ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred ‘Everard, 522’ Third St., left Friday by motor for Hettinger, where they, will visit with | relatives for several days. On their return they will be accompanied by their son, Duane, who has been visit- ing there. * * * Con Nupen, 219 Seventh St,, will leave this evening for Hot Springs, Ark., where he will attend the na- tional convention of the Lincoln .Na- tional Life Insurance company. of which he is @ representative. The convention will be in session March 1-3. ‘ ee Miss Perma Paulson, 305 Third 8t., will leave Tuesday for St. Cloud, Minn, where she will be bookkeeper for the St. Cloud branch of the Sing- er Sewing Machine company. She has been employed as bookkeeper for the branch office here for the last two years. cel aan ENE aaah Meetings of Clubs | And Social. Groups. | ———- The Bismarck Study club will hold a meeting at 2:30 o'clock Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. F. C. Stucke, 722 Mandan, iad * Members of the Liberal Arts club will be entertained at a 7 o'clock dinner Monday evening at the home of Mrs. V. J. LaRose, ‘522 Sixth street. A program will follow. * There will be ting of the Busy Bee Sewing club Tuesday aft- ‘ ** * A social meeting of the Bismarck chapter of the American Association of University Women will be held at 8 @clock Tuesday evening at the Uni- versity Club, ee Fourth _ street e Frerking, - Bissell ant charge. *e# Members of the local W. C. T. U. will meet at 3 o'clock Tuesday after- noon at the home of Mrs. Emma Var- ney, 408 Second street. Mrs. C. G. Boise will report the recent W. C. T. U. conference in Fargo which she at- tended and Mrs. R. E. Kennedy will give a talk fp eoree ‘Washington.” * The Monday club will meet at 3 fashington, and members Taling ‘to. the Washingion, bicen: re tennial observance. Tribune Want Ads Bring Results Dancing Party Planned By 40 and 8 Voiture The Bismarck voiture, 40 and 8, World War veterans honor society, ‘will sponsor a dancette March 12 at the Dome, according to Milton Rue, chairman of the committee in charge of the affair. A large number of invitations have been issued and additional ones may be obtained from any member of the tion. The dance program will be featur- ed by several novelty dances and oth- er entertainment is planned. The Sammy Kontos orchestra will furnish the music. Assisting Rue in making plans for the party are Charles F. Martin, and Herman Leonhard, Bismarck, and boy, bed Dow and Richard Furness, Man- Legion Progra Honors Washington Members of the .American Legion ‘and the Legion Auxiliary honored the memory of George Washington with a joint program Friday evening in the ‘World War Memorial building, fol- lowing the regular business sessions of the two groups. Thomas Burke gave an address on ‘Washington in which he showed the efficiency and organizing ability of the man as indicated by the army he built up in the early years of the rev- olution. He patd tribute also to his administrative qualities which made him a great statesman as well as a strategist and helped him to formu- late @ government in the face of the dissension and chaos following the war. Spencer Boise, commander of the local Legion post, presided. Vocal numbers were given by Myron H. An- derson, baritone, and a group of 12 students from the Will school, in colonial costumes, danced the min- uet. Refreshments were served by the Legionnaires after the program, ar- ranged by Dr. G. M. Constans, Tom Burke and Arthur Tavis, assisted by the Auxiliary. committee, composed of Mrs. ©. W. Leifur, Mrs. George 2. Shafer, Mrs. Spencer Boise, Mrs. George F, Bird, Miss Mary Houser and Miss Esther Maxwell. St. Paul Archdiocese Answers Protestants St. Paul, Feb. 27.—(?)—The chan- cery office of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of St. Paul Friday night issued a statement replying to a re- solution on mixed marriages adopted yesterday by the Protestants Min- listers Council of St. Paul. ‘The council's resolution criticized a papal decree from the Vatican, which was to the effect that children of mixed religious marriages must be reared.as Roman Catholics. The re- ;solution “said the: decree. was an “affront to all other Christian com- munions.” | The chancery statement gave “hearty approval” to that portion of the resolution admonishing Protest- ants to consider the “unhappy religi- ous complications” involved. in: mixed marriages of Catholics and Protest- ants, but took exception to the asser- tion that the..decree was an “affront to all other Christian communions.” The chancery denied the Protest- fant statement that. the “Roman |Catholic church refuses. to recognize the validity of marriages performed by Protestant ministers. or civil authorities.” Bind Maxwell Over George Maxwell, Bismarck, charged with a statutory offense, was bound ‘@ over to district court after he waived preliminary examination before Judge E. 8, Allen Saturday morning. He was returned to the Burleigh county jail in default of. $1,000 bond. His counsel indicated that hail would be furnished Monday. FORMER U MAN DIES Grand Forks, N. D., Feb. 27.—(?)— Dr. J. M. Ladd, 70 years old, editor for a Chicago book. publishing com- any and formerly a member of the University of North Dakota faculty, died unexpectedly of pneumonia in Chicago Feb. 18, according to word received here. SENTENCES FORMER N. D. MAN Chicago, Feb. 27.—()—Henry Thompson, 31, confessed plotter of a fire which took three lives, was sen- tenced Safurday to 50 years in rn Thompson, who came here ei years ago from Devils Lake, N. D., t.| said he hired two youths to fire house because Mrs. Mary rooming Lydi@| Boehm, his housekeeper, had left his employ to go there. Ribbed oranges, with outer skin shaped like that of cantaloupe, are now being grown in the Rio Grande valley of Texas. Special meet of Bismarck lodge, No. 5, ae, F. and A, M. Monday, Feb. 29th, at 7:30 p. m. Work in E, A. degree. GIAMONDS,“JENF*n** WE Specialise in Diamonds a nd setting, aluo Wed- Ging Rings and Sterling table-ware. Bring us your watch repairs as we have the best ipped shop in Bismarck, bes! know watches and diamonds are safe ‘when left with us, F. A; KNOWLES Jeweler, “Biamarck’s Diamond Store” ativer To District Court} Wins Divorce | MARY MULHERN Los Angeles, Feb. 27—(?)—Because Jack Pickford, film and stage actor, was described as having “a terrific, jealous nature,” and as:a-man who seldom ate and slept. until 3 o'clock in the afternoon, Mary Mulhern, actress, Saturday was in possession of a divorce. (22 English Chemist | Discovers Neutron OO Baltimore, Feb. 27.—(?)—The discovery in Cavendish labora- tory, Cambridge university, Lon- don, by James Chadwick of the “neutron,” a particle so minute it carries no electrical charge, and hailed as the greatest: find in the Scientific world since the elec- tron, the proton and the X-ray, was announced Saturday by the Baltimore Sun in a dispatch ‘from the Manchester Guardian. ‘The “neutron” is described as one of the ultimate particles in nature, so tiny it would take 200,- 000,000,000,000,000,000,000 to make @ mass weighing an ounce. Neu- trons are not waves, the Dis- patch said, but particles. But they have as particles, hitherto unknown powers of penetratios. In the realm of astronomy and the evolution of the universe, neutrons are of fundamental im- portance, representing the first step in the evolution of matter out of primeval electrons and . protons, the paper said, FARGO PIONEER DIES Fargo, N. D., Feb, 27.—(#)—Fargo lost one of its colorful residents of Pioneer times with the death early Saturday of Fred A. Bowers, follow- ing an illness of several years dura- tion from cancer. . Relatives include @ son, John H. Bowers, of the state land department, Bismarck. . Report from Japanese Regarding Kiangwan! Is Declared Erroneous (Continued from page One) Kiangwan village, the stubborn Chinese garrison in that. beleaguer- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1982 ‘Jed town still was holding on early} years, Hansen asserted, because it Proved that the organization was not, ‘controlled by political bosses. He as- saw the parade of Chinese stretcher-) serted that the Chamber of Commerce of this city now is made up of honest, sincere, patriotic and loyal citizens. Hansen asserted that the Jamestown this morning. ‘The Associated Press correspondent bearers carrying wounded out of the village. It was testimony enough that the town was not yet surround- ed although the Japanese had said they had thrown a line around it and occupied the western section. Supplies for the small defending] ing. garrison were coming in from Miao- chungehen, running a gauntlet of machine gun fire from both sides, where ,the Japanese had swung around in an effort to cut off the vil- lage. The Chinese, however, still kept the neck of the: bottle open. For bers. last SAYS JAPAN WILL NOT COURT SOVIET TROUBLE (Copyright, bagi ts The Associated ) Tokyo, Feb. 27.—()—Japan is not likely to court.another international crisis with Russia, government spokes- men were quick to point out today in commenting on queries of the Rus- sian’ government regarding ‘military operations in northern Manchuria. The Russian queries, presented by L, M. Karakhan, acting Soviet com- missar for foreign affairs, turned General Jiro Tamon’s northern Man- churia campaign ‘into an interna- tional issue and took official Tokyo completely by surprise. about the and ministers alike asserted Russla’s| jose “nervousness” over Japan’s intentions} the capital removal but that the in north Manchuria were based on| “main question ie the saving or eae 000 a yea ‘ing paid uation abd magnified’ 4, “Mey weal Ee he Gee ee distorted interpretations of the sit- problem” to unwarranted dimensions. The war office was confident, a spokesman said, that M. Karakhan’s figures were exaggerated. He denied emphatically the. Jap- anese military authorities were con- niving in ‘any way to encourage “white” Russians and he suggested reports of their activities emanated from: the “whites” themselves, -per- haps to help raise funds. NEW RUSSO-JAPANESE WAR THOUGHT REMOTE Washington, Feb. 27.—(P)—Dis- pleased as it may be over Japan's activities in Manchuria, there is no serious belief here that Russia will risk another war with the Nipponese. ‘The disastrous experience of 1904 and 1905 is still too fresh in mind. The attempt of Czar Nicholas to fight 5,000 miles from home with a single-track railway as the only means of communication cost him his absolutist rule and, eventually, the throne. The Trans-Siberian rail- way is little better today than it was then. It is double-tracked only in limit- ed sections and Soviet roiling stock, especially locomotives, is mostly old and in poor repair. In killed, wounded and captured, Russia lost over 388,000 men in its war to dominate Manchuria, while the Japanese losses were only about! 166,000. In the 27 intervening years Japan has made remarkable a vances as a military and naval power. Hansen Charges He Was Offered Bribe To Drop Campaign (Continued from page One) to 51. ‘There’ were’ ‘some “boos” evi- dently directed at the 51 who re- cently demanded withdrawal on the ground that persistence in the issue was placing Jamestown in an unfair light before the state. During his references to political boss rule, Hansen made scathing references to the Fargo Forum and the Valley City | Times-Record. | Says Some Recanted Since signing the last demand for withdrawal, Hansen asserted, some of | the signers have recanted and have) since told him they would give $500 if they had not signed. The meeting last Tuesday night of the Chamber of Commerce, at which the battle was fought out, was the best thing for Jamestown in 20 WALTER HUSTON THEATRE “The House of Hits Big Midnite Show Sunday 12:15 A. M. What! Do You Ever their dreamy father! Emma! MARIE Creates her finest characte! “EMMA” in Metro's’ Joyous Hit! , RICHARD CROMWELL JEAN HERSHOLT MYRNA LOY NOVELTY comMEDY NEWS Continuous Perfo; oT rm “THE BEAST OF ee With MON., TVES. and WED. Actually Sit Down, Emma? What a shock to see you stopping even for an instant your endless labor of love for five motherless children and How we'll laugh with you, love with you, ery with you, DRESSLER With, “‘What’s What” “The Wonder Hat”. “Stockin’ Money” THE city” JEAN HARLOW asked of him was “how much has Jamestown got to offer?” say who asked the question but in- ferred it was a member of the ‘legis- Jature. Jamestown does not want the Bank of North Dakota building in Bis- marck, but only the capital. Fredricks said some unkind things ing that the “cactus weeds should be cut away from around the Memorial building” and that the old capitol building was “located on a hill where there’s nothing but described the principal contents of housing many state offices as “so stuffed robin and Teddy's wooden horse.” Spokesmen for the war and foreign question but that Bismarck would Rev. Keller said the mairi question is whether the state capital was C Capital club now has 400 mem- bey Gow ene ioe paid|behind the Chamber of Commerce” prltae of Commerce or.the James- ir dues each after the meet-jand urged a “clean, honest, sincere jun, EUGENIE COMBINATION W: . fight to bring the capital to James-| Discussing the situation with The| $3.75, Fredericks ‘Combination, Fredricks also hinted at bribery, as-| town.” - | Tribune's | representative, Zimmer-| $6.50, Oil tonic $5.00, serting that when he went to Bis-/ Chase asserted that Stutsman/man expressed sorrow that James-| complete. We specialize in marck to lobby with the legislature |county will go 95 per cent for capi-|town is not united in its fight to] nent war California Wave winter one of the first questions He didn't Fredricks asserted . that Slights Capitol Hill because farming it the present capital site, assert- part of coyotes.” He | canvass Liberty Memorial building, now located in the right place at the be- ginning and that he wanted a review oa Saeed which located it in Bis- Flannagan the Chamber of ing united Jamestown and its lead- ing men, asked those present to “get tal removal and hoped for a reunidn and rejuvenation of the people of the county after the fight was over. Greene complained that the weekly newspapers of the state evidently do not give Jamestown credit for honest intentions in its capital removal ef- fort, asserted that the center of pop- ulation has begun shift! ridiculed the idea that the western industries because of the coal and clay deposits there and called .for volunteers to make a house-to-house ature to the homes of the voters of the state. He called for 200 persons ing” campaign to spread: Jamestown’s to furnish cars and take out crews! gospel will furnish their own cars of workers and about 10 persons) put will be recompensed for their responded from the floor. Capital! gasoline, oil and meals, Their time removal officers, however, expressed| will be donated. belief that at least 50 crews of work- ‘ ers would be available. Volunteers | -=====eeweeenensreeeneeettey were asked to give their names to the} moO LATE TO CLASSIFY the action of Commerce as hav- obtain the capital. The volunteers in the “door-knock- ‘ing eastward the west is so arid that is on the downgrade there; the state ever will develop to deliver Jamestown’s liter- so's old ox-yoke. So and 40's He asserted there is no and Jamestown would gain by Keller Wants ‘Review’ APITO THEATRE L Last Times Tonight (Saturday) HOOT GIBSON: CLEARING:: THE RANGE FLASHING GUNS THUNDERING HOOFS LIGHTNING SPEED Coming Monday OUT OF THE LAP OF | THE GODS INTO THE HEART OF THE WORLD! Constance RENNETT Her own ravishing self in a picture all hail as her greatest... Blessed with the flowerof her art! 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