The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 24, 1935, Page 5

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ee THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE A SATURDAY, AUGUST 24, 1935 , 3 ©) soc ETY and CLUBS Kiwanis Social Events Fill Calendar for Next Four Days Women Visitors Will Be Feted at Luncheons, Dinners and Teas in Bismarck for the district conven- tion which opens Monday morning and continues through Wednesday, will find a gay round of social func- tions planned for them. The special entertaining for women guests will get underway at 7 o’clock Sunday evening when wives of of- ficers will be guests at dinner at the Rose room of the Patterson hotel. This and all other events especially for the women have been planned by committees working under Mrs. James W. Guthrie, wife of the local club president. Mrs. F. H. Waldo will preside Sunday night and will speak on the historical setting of a tour to be taken later. Music will be pro- vided by Mrs. W. J. Targart, so- prano; Miss Mary Flora Wood, violin, and Miss Bernice Wagner, marimba. Mrs. Arthur Bauer will be the piano accompanist. Register at G. P. Hotel Miss Anna D. Burr, Mrs. John Burke and Mrs. A. J. Lunde will be on duty all day Monday at the Grand Pacific hotel where women guests are to register. In the afternoon there will be a golf tournament and in- formal reception at the Municipal golf course, the visitors being welcome to “drop in upon arrival.” Tea will be! served all afternoon and at 4 o'clock there will be music by Mrs. John L. Hughes and Miss Ruth Neste. Monday evening the ladies join the men for stunt night at the Bismarck city auditorium. This entertainment, the convention welcome in the house of representatives chamber at 3:30 o'clock Tuesday morning and a num- ber of the outstandig talks will be open to a number of Bismarck resi- dents and Fort Lincoln officers and their wives, who have received special invivtations which they must pre- seni. Following the convention welcome Tuesday morning, the women will tour the capitol, then return to the house chamber for the message of Carle- ton P. Schaub, district governor, ad the address, “Will for Peace” by Rev. John E. Bell, Brandon, Man. At 12:30 o'clock they will continue with the Kiwanis program, attending an {nformal joint luncheon at the World War Memorial building. The Bran- don club is providing entertainment. Style Show Feature Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock a! reception, tea and style show will be given at the Patterson hotel Terrace} Gardens. Distinguished Kiwanis! wives who will be in the receiving line include Mrs. John Burke, Mrs. George F. Shafer and Mrs. A. P. Len- hart, Bismarck; Mrs. J. H. Moss, M: waukee, Wis.; Mrs. Schaub, St. Pat Mrs. J. E. Messer, Watertown, S. D.; Mrs. W. M. Wemet, Valley City; Mrs. Karl E. Mundt, Madison, 8S. D., and Mrs. R. A. Grady, Duluth, Minn. Mrs. Walter Renden, reception committee head; Mrs. Charles C. Goodwin, style show director, and Mrs. F. A. Knowles, tn charge of the tea, are responsible for this function. Mrs, J. L. Barth and Miss Burr will pour. The remainder of the day will be filled with the convention banquet at 5:30 o'clock and the Governor's ball at 9 o'clock, both to be held at the Memorial building. Breakfast and Doll Show Wednesday's schedule takes in a sightseeing tour at 11:45 o'clock and breakfkast at the golf course club “aouse at 11:45 o'clock, this to be fol- owed by bridge, a doll show and for- mal adjournment. Mrs. Henry O. Putnam is arranging the breakfast und Mrs. Fred Jansonius is preparing she doll show, which will feature a gresentation of the marionette show, ‘Hansel and Gretel,” by Junior Amer- ican Legion Auxiliary children direct- 2d by Mrs. H. A. Pike, and music by small children of the city. Follow- ing the tour time is being allowed to hear the address of John H. Moss, past president of Kiwanis Interna-| tional. Committees working with Mrs. Guthrie on ladies’ entertainmet are: Reception—Mrs. Renden, chairman, and Miss Burr, Mrs. Knowles, Mrs. William McDonzld, Mrs. B. O. Ref- vem, Mrs. A. D. McKinnon, Mrs. Lunde, Mrs. W. E. Cole, Mrs. Waldo. ; Mrs. Burke and Mrs. A. W. Mundy; | entertainment—Mrs. Forrest M. Da- vis, chairman, and Mrs. Reuben Stee,) Mrs. Goodwin, Mrs. Jansonius and Mrs. Opie 8. Rindahl; luncheons— Mrs. Putnam, chairman, and Mrs. Barth, Mrs. Richard F. Krause, Mrs. Shafer, Mrs, N. Lloyd Lillestrand, Mrs. R. W. Lumry, Mrs. Carl J. Tull-| Bridgeman- berg, Mrs. H. W. Graunke and Mrs. Arthur V. Sorenson; Mrs. Burke, chairman, and Mrs.A. E. Brink, Mrs. Cole, Mrs. Paul Wachter, Mrs. J. P. Wagner and Mrs. H. E. Spohn; ae eae O'Hare, chairman, and Mrs. O. A. Visiting Kiwaians and their wives|Convert, Mrs. Lenhart, Mrs. O. V. Bowman, Mrs. G. E. Wingreene and Mrs. G. A. Osmundson. Catherine E. Morris, 714 Sixth St., at 7:30 o'clock Monday evening to per- A treat for the whole family. Take some home to- night. Your VELVET dealer has it. Mandan Aviator Weds Mildred Lane of Mott Formal announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Mildred Lane, Mott, and John Osterhouse, Mandan, well-known North Dakota pilot, which occurred during a quiet ceremony performed at Lakota on Wednesday. Mrs. Osterhouse is Hettinger county superintendent of schools. The bride- groom is manager of the Ben Eielson airport at Mandan: The couple flew to Mandan on Thursday. They stopped at James- town on their way and were over- night guests of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Burleson of bi ae Local People Attend Marriage at Grafton Mr, and Mrs. J. I. Arman and son, Jack, of 316 Anderson St., were among the guests at the wedding of Miss Sylvia Arman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Arman, Grafton, to Lyman P, Bjerken, Grand Forks, son of Mr. and Mrs. Olaf Bjerken, Page, which was performed during a ceremony read at the Grafton Lutheran church by Rev. H. A. Helsem at 10 o'clock Sunday morning, August 18. A wed- ding breakfast was served at the Ar- man home for 30 guests following the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Bjerken have gone to Minnesota for their wedding trip and will be at home after September 1 at Grand Forks where he is employed as a pharmacist. The bride has been a clerk in the Walsh county judge's office for the last four years. Mr. Bjerken is a graduate of the North Dakota Agricultural college school of pharmacy. sightseeing-- decorations—Mrs. H. F. * * * D. H. Group to Make Treasure Hunt Plans ‘The Degree of Honor Protective as- sociation August social committee will meet with the chairman, Miss fect plans for the treasure hunt to be staged next week. The event has been changed from Wednesday, the regular meeting night, to Thursday because of the circus performance scheduled for the first date. A special invitation to participate is extended to new members who joined the association with the spring class. x * * Mrs. Farrell Visits Fort Lincoln Friday Mrs. Louis Farrell, who lived at Fort Lincoln from September 1934, until July of this year while her hus- band, Colonel Farrell, was the post commandant, visited there Thursday with the officers and their wives while she was en route to Fort George Wright, Wash., Colonel Farrell's new station, after an extended visit in the East. Mrs. Farrell was met by Lieut. Col. Joseph S. Leonard and was enter- tained at luncheon by Major and Mrs. John F. Duckworth. Since leav- ing here early in July she has been visiting her brother and sister-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. W. E. Wilson of Grand Rapids, Mich., and her mother, Mrs. W. E. Wilson, Sr., of Tulaski, Tenn. In Washington she will join her hus- band and dapghters, the Misses Eliza- * ee * Missionary Society Honors Miss Dodds Covers were laid for 13 guests when the First Presbyterian Women’s Mis- sionary society gave a 1 o'clock luncheon at the Inn Saturday for Miss Alma Dodds, mission worker in North China for 25 years, who is a week-end visitor in the city and who will speak at the church at 11 o'clock Tell. Sunday morning. Mrs. Nelson Sau- pesrend 2 ae vain, dered ue the society, ar- - ranged the ction which was con- V.F.W. Head and Wife |oiidea with » social hour at the home of Mrs. George A. Welch, 415 Fourth St. Miss Dodds discussed her mis- sionary experiences informally. ee % Mrs. Carl E. Dybal of this city, who leaves soon for Missoula, Mont., to make her home, and Miss Eliza- beth Grunenfelder of Wangs, Switzer- land, who has spent the last year in To Attend 3 Meetings Mr. and Mrs. P. G. Harrington, 511 Third St., expect to leave Monday on a trip to the South during which they will attend three conventions, will tour much country of historic interest and will visit relatives. From Bismarck, Mr. and Mrs. Har- rington go to Hudson, Wis., to visit his mother, Mrs. Effie Young, for four or five days, thence to Kansas City, Mo., where Mr. Harrington, who is department commander for the Vet- erans of Foreign Wars, will confer with national officers on department affairs, on Sept. 4. Their next long stop will be at San Antonio, Texas, where the Spanish American War veterans are to meet. About five days will be spent at New Orleans, La., where the V. F. W. is to meet, Sept. 15-20, after which they will tour the Gulf of Mexico shores. On Sept. 14, Mr. Harrington is to meet with the national pone of ae ministration of the V. F. W., to wi he will present department matters.| with relatives at McIntosh and at Mrs. Harrington has been elected an!Lake Bemidji. The family will re- official delegate from the local V. F.|turn to the city Monday noon and W. Auxiliary. again will make their home at 1021 Leaving New Orleans on the 2ist,!Fifth St. Einar Husby, son of Mr. Harringtons will make their next stop|and Mrs. Husby, who has been in at St. Louis, Mo., where he will be a|Europe this summer with tie oe guest at the national American Le-|cordia college band, has lant a gion convention. this country and will make a apa r When the meeting is concluded,|of appearances with the srOUn De they will travel to Hannibal,|cluding a homecoming concer os Missouri, to the grave -of Ad-|Moorhead, Minn., before coming miral Robert E. Coontz, ranking of-|the city. ficer of the U. S, Navy during the World War and past commander of the V. F. W. Mr. Harrington will at- tend a meeting with the Fargo V. F. W. post set for Oct. 4 while on the return trip which will bring them back to Bismarck the following day. given for 12 guests Thursday after- noon by Mrs. Joseph Baron, Mrs. Lawrence Pederson and Mrs. Harry Melander, all of Mandan, at the Baron home. The hostesses present- ed gifts to both. Miss Grunenfelder, who has been the guest of her broth- er and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Anton Grunenfelder, leaves early next week for New York City and will visit there until she sails early in September. ee * John Husby left Saturday for Mc- Intosh, Minn., to get Mrs. Husby and their daughters, Hedwig and Sonia, who have been spending the summer ee * Mrs, Oliver Sorsdah] was 8 Bis- marck guest when Mrs, Jack Brown cf Mandan gave a bunco party Wed- nesday evening for Mrs. Banjamin Bunco was played at six tables, score * * * awards going to Mrs. N. E. Walker, Mrs. A. C. Holmstrom and daugh-|Mrs, F. A. Armstrong and Miss Beat- ter, Miss Josephine Holmstrom, of rice Johnson. Max, spent Wednesday and Thursday visiting Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Ander- son, 930 Tenth St. They were re- turning home after a two-week vaca- tion spent in touring the Bad Lands and visiting Mrs. Holmstrom’s son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Holmstrom, Regent. * *k * Friends here have received word of the birth of a son Tuesday morning to Lt. and Mrs. Kester Hastings of Washington, D. C. Mrs. Hastings is the former Miss Ruth Eastman, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. L. G. East- man, Hazen. Mrs. Eastman left for Washington on the day of the in- fant’s birth and will remain there for a few weeks. ** * Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Burckhardt Main Avenue West, are home after a week's stay at Milwaukee, Wis., where they visited Mrs. Burckhardt’s father, Edward Schultz, and Mr. Burck- hardt’s mother, siderably improved when they left. ee ® Miss Mary Litt, 217 Seventh S&t., of the Bismarck public library staff, leaves Monday for Sheridan, Wyo., to spend her two-week vacation with Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Goar. Mrs. Goar is the former Miss Mathilda Dietrich of this city. * * 4% Miss Helen Saunders, society editor of the Mandan Pioneer, and her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Irvine Dietrich, Dickinson, left Friday evening on a vacation trip to the South Dabste Bleek Hills. * Mrs. J. Jorrison of St. Paul has been visiting with her sister, Mrs. J. L, Garske, 118 First St., and also with her daughter, Sister Mary David, OS.B., of St. Joseph’s convent at Mandan. ** * Mrs. Grace Van Meter, 217 First &t., local federal employee who is vacationing at Fargo, was among eight former residents of Ellendale entertained Friday by Mrs. L. C. Courteney of Fargo. =e ® Mr, and Mrs. Hugh Black, Patter- son hotel, are returning this week- end following a visit at Fargo with Mr. and Mrs, H, M. Houd. Mr. Black is the state printer. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Frank Boehm, 314 Ninth 8t., left Saturday noon for Rochester, Minn., where Mr. Boehm is to receive medical attention. They will be away for about two weeks. * * # Mac MacCannell, Minot. and John Matteson, Jamestown, are house {guests of Donald Bowman. son of Mr. and Mrs. O. V. Bowman, 609 Fifth st Russell Co. Mandan, shared honors at ® party|? Ries (Gladys Butz), a recent bride.) and sons, James and Robert, of 216/ Mrs, John Burck- | hardt, who both are ill but were con- | New Jersey Minister Dr. Robert Scott Ingles of Jersey City, N. J., is a visitor in the city and will preach at two rural Presbyterian churches Sunday. At 10 o'clock he will preach at Glencoe, after which he will go to the Stewartsdale church to conduct the 11:30 o'clock service. * * OR Nye Family Members Make Short Stay Here Mrs. Gerald P. Nye, wife of U. 8. Senator Gerald P. Nye of Coopers- town and Washington, D. C., sons, Robert and James, and daughter, Marjorie, who have been on a motor trip to Yellowstone National park, stopped in Bismarck overnight Fri- day and were guests at the Patterson hotel. They continued their trip to Washington late Saturday morning. {Before going to the park they visited in the state for a short time. * * * Roy Brant, formerly of Jamestown, errived at Mandan Friday to become program director and commercial manager for radio station KGCU. Townsend Picnic to Draw 100 From City At least 100 persons from Bismarck are expected to join the caravan which will leave at 9 o'clock Sunday morning from the Ray Collis resi dence, 214 Broadway avenue, for Brush lake two miles north of Mercer where a giant rally and picnic of District 5 Townsend club members will be held during the afternoon. Counties included in the district are Burleigh, Emmons, Sheridan, McLean, Oliver, Mercer, Morton, Grant and Sioux. John Boss and Lester Briggle of this city are presi- dent and secretary, respectively, of the district board and have been ac- tive in making arrangements for Sunday's gathering, which will be addressed by Paul Campbell, Minot, state chairman, and others. A ball game also is planned. Son of Hubert Work Kills Self in West Los Angeles, Aug. 24.—(?)—Disposi- tion of the remains of Robert V. H. Work, 37, who ended his life in a fit of despondency over ill health, await- ed word Saturday from his father, Dr. Hubert Work, cabinet member in the Coolidge administration, Work was found dead in a Hollywood hotel Friday, a bullet wound in the head and a farewell note to his wife, Lucie, nearby. | City and County | 1 SSE PT Miss Ina Montgomery has been appointed acting FERA administra- tor for Burke county following the resignation of W. D. Kelly, E. A. Willson, state administrator, an- nounces. Kelly is now with the WPA as district director of intake and certification and Miss Mont- gomery has been case supervisor in Burke county. CHURCH NOTICE Evangelistic Crusade, Church of the Nazarene, World War Memorial build- ing, A. J. Lamm, Evangelist. Preaching at 11 a. m., “Carry Your Corner;” aiso 1, 2 and 3 p. m. Evening service at 7:30, “Back at the Old Home Again.” STATE THEATRE TODAY AND SUN. Charles Bickford Helen Vinson =< “A NOTORIOUS || GENTLEMAN” Thrills - Laughs - Romance i i —Plus— i “PHANTOM EMPIRE” | with \ GENE AUTREY the Singing Cowboy | SOUND NEWS - NOVELTY Shows at 7 and 9 p. m. Admission 10c and 25c COMFORT 50c Special Sunday DINNER Fried i Spring Chicken and all the trimmin’s STEAKS AND CHOPS ...... 65c Served from 11:30 a. m. till 8:30 p. m. _ at the G.P. Restaurant To Be Heard Sunday| ®|some provincial towns many Jews @ |for delivery of necessities from Ber- MERCURY HITS 97, Restless Night; Cooler Weather Forecast Bismarck with the thermometer soaring to 97 degrees was not the warmest point in North Dakota Fri-j day (Sanish reported the heat at the century mark) but residents perspired uncomfortably in their, beds when the thermometer dropped only 22 de- grees during the night. Sleep was next to impossible as the hot, damp winds continued to blow| jthroughout the evening. The lowest temperature recorded during the 24- hour period prior to 7 a. m., Satur- \day was 75 degrees, according to re- Ports from the federal weather bu- Teau station here. | a In addition to Sanish and Bismarck other state points reporting excessive heat were Dickinson 98, Garrison 97, Beach, Dunn Center, Max, and Wil-! liston all 96 However, all other state Points showed falls as high as 37 de- grees. Cooler weather and a trace of pre- cipitation were recorded in the Capi- tal City Saturday morning and the! mercury stood at 70 at 2 p. m., with] the forecast for generally fair and cooler weather Saturday night and Sunday. Grand Forks received .86 of an inch of precipitation Friday while many other points, including Garrison with | .53 of an inch, got local thundershow- } ers. Mother Drowns Self And Three Children Monroe, Mich. Aug. 24.—(P)—Au- thorities reconstructed a grim trag- edy on an isolated Monroe county farm Saturday and said that a moth- er drowned her three children and, herself in a 32-foot well. Henry Veerecke, 50-year-old farm- er, returning from the harvest field, | found the bodies of his wife, Mrs. Gulma Veerecke, and his three chil- dren, Donald, 14, Ralph, 6, and Pat-/ ricla, 5, in 12 feet of water at the boctom of the well, | Coroner Ernest Durell and Sheriff Joseph Bairley said. the mother had been suffering from a mental afflic-! tion since a recent illness. New Restrictions on Jews Bring Misery Berlin, Aug. 24—(#)—Jews were barred from trolley cars in Magdeburg Saturday as new restrictions brought | new hardships for thousands of oth-| ers. The steet cars bore signs: “Jews | not wanted.” | Karschin meat dealers were forced | to make deliveries to Jewish customers late at night and secretly, and in were depending on mails and freight lin. SINCLAIR TAKES OATH Washington, Aug. 24.—(?)—James H. Sinclair, former representative from North Dakota, took the oath of FALLS 22 DEGREES|° Capital City Residents Spend) |, aoe eee : * Minot Hip Pocket ce Blindpig Closes Minot, N. D., Aug. 24.—Charles Daffes won't sell alleged liquor { on a Minot street corner any more. “Got anything to drink around here,” a stranger asked Daffes Thursday. “Sure, what'll you have, whis- key or alcohol,” Daffes replied. The stranger specified whiskey and handed over 65 cents in ex- change for a half pint flask. Then the stranger, J. B. Mc- Eown, Ward county deputy sher- iff, took Daffes into custody, lodged him in the calaboose. Charged with bootlegging, Daffes waived preliminary examination and was released on $500 bond pending arraignment in district court. RETRIAL ORDERED IN ATTORNEY FEES CASE Congressman Lemke and Part- ner Involved in Suit for $900 at Fargo A new trial of a law suit involving Congressman William Lemke was or- dered Saturday by the state supreme court in an action growing out of a claim for attorney’s fees. Lemke and his law partner, Harry A. Weaver, of the Fargo firm of Lemke and Weaver, obtained a judg- ment of $900 against the Merchants National Bank and Trust Company, as trustee for Chris B. Hanson, Counsel for the bank moved for judgment notwithstanding the ver- dict, and the district court set aside the $900 judgment. Lemke and Weaver contended the district court had lost jurisdiction, claimed the motion was made after judgment had been entered, and ap- pealed to the supreme court. The supreme court modified the action of the lower court and sent the case back for retrial. SEWAGE TROUBLES MINOT Minot, N. D., Aug. 24.—As a result of trouble with the Minot sewage dis- posal plant, restrictions probably will be placed on the emptying of com- mercial wastes. Part of the trouble here has been partially cleared up, M. D. Hollis, state sanitary engineer, declared here Friday. WANT TO PAY IN KIND Willmar, Minn., Aug. 24—(P)—A threat to halt repayment of govern- ment seed and feed loans unless a change in federal regulations to per- mit payment in kind is made, was sent to Washington by the Kandiyohi County Farmers Holiday association following a meeting here. LAKERS BEAT MILLERS Devils Lake, N. D., Aug. 24.—(2)— Errorless fielding, lusty hitting and five-hit pitching by big Eugene Bab- bitt combined to enable the Lakers to settle their differences with the Dakota Millers here Friday night in @ seven-inning “grudge” battle as a office Saturday as a member of the Mexican special claims commission. four-run splurge in the seventh gave Devils Lake a 6 to 2 decision. NAME STATE CORN Executive Group Meeting Next Week | Committees named to handle ar- iTangements for the annual state Corn Show were announced here Sat- urday. Selection of the membership of the ‘six directing committees was made by the board of directors of the As- sociation of Commerce at a meet- ing held Friday afternoon. Dates for the show, staged annual- ly in the World War Memorial build- ing here, have not yet been selected. It is expected that the show will be held sometime in October. The exact dates will be decided at a meeting of the Corn Show executive committee next week. Members of the executive commit- tee are George Will, chairman; F. L. Conklin, J. P. French, Obert Olson and J. P. Jackson. Committees named are: Finance—J. E. Davis, Carl Nelson, Harvey Niles; exhibits—George Bird, Robert Montgomery, J. P. Schmidt; Publicity—P. J. Starkle, William Moeller and Bird; educational pro- gram—will, H. O. Putnam, Starkle; decorations—B, O. Ward, Leonard Anderson, Douglas Yeater; and en- tertainment—A. R. Tavis, F. A. Cope- line, J. L. Barth, A. E. Brink, J. J. Loberg. Grove Giants to Play Wishek Here Sunday Wishek’s baseball team, champions of the Dakota League, will oppose the Grove Giants, state penitentiary team, at 1:15 p. m., Sunday, at the prison ball park. Assisted by Charles Moore, dusky hurler, the Giants have won 13 out of 17 games played this year. Moore, a strikeout artist, has whiffed on the average of 10 batters a game this year. Schneider will do the receiving. ROBBER GETS 10 YEARS Fairbury, Neb. Aug. 24—(P)—Jess Doyle Saturday was sentenced to serve 10 years in the Nebraska peni- tentiary when he pleaded guilty to participation in the $152,000 robbery of the First National Bank of Fair- bury, April 4, 1933, BREAKS LEG IN CRASH Minot, N. D., Aug. 24.—Mrs. C. B. Hitland of Charison is a patient in a Minot hospital, a fractured leg re- ceived in a highway collision west of Sanish being treated. SHOW COMMITTEES Exact Dates Will Be Chosen at |Bonds of Carignan | Canceled by State State Insurance Commissioner Har- old Hopton Saturday said he had di- rected the state bonding department to cancel the bonds of J. N. Carignan, in his official position as Sioux county register of deeds, county judge and clerk of court. Hopton said he was taking the ac- tion following reports by State Ex- aminer Adam Fefor that shortages to- taling $468.40 had appeared in the three offices held by Garignan. Carignan was reported to be return- ing from New Jersey. Fire Destroys Depot, Elevators at Binford Binford, N. D., Aug. 24—(4)—The Northern Pacific depot and two elevators were destroyed by fire late Friday night which threatened the residential district before firemen from three towns brought the blaze under control early Saturday. The two elevators destroyed belong- ed to the Monarch Elevator company. About 3,000 bushels of grain were believed stored in the buildings, al- though an official report has not yet been made. No estimate of amount of loss could be obtained. Correction Made in Story of Accident Although H. P. Asselstine of Bis- marck was exonerated of criminal negligence in connection with the death of Fred Schultz, Glen Ullin farmer killed in an accident last Sun- day, no statement of “responsibility” for the accident has been made by him, C. F. Kelsch, Morton county’s state’s attorney, said Saturday. In a previous story Kelsch was er- roneously credited with saying that yinvestigation of the accident showed {that Asselstine was not responsible. WILLISTON BOY HURT Minneapolis, Aug. 24.—(4)—Gene Brown, six, of Williston, N. D., a pas- senger, was bruised when an auto- mobile driven by James L. Finnegan, Stillwater, Minn., and C, E. Teorey, Mineapolis, collided here Saturday. SIOUX COUNCIL MEETS Fort Yates, N. D., Aug. 24.—(P)— Members of the general council of the Standing Rock Indian reserva- tion assembled here Saturday to con- sider adoption of a proposed consti- tution and by-laws for the tribe, DAM WORKER KILLED Fort Peck, Mont., Aug. 24.—(P)— Arthur Kveseth, 43, shovel oiler for Spillway Builders, Inc., was fatally injured in a fall from a shovel boom Saturday. To Love Her Was Dynamite! To Spurn Her Was. 2s Delghtfully Cool Bismarck, Wed, Aug. 28 2 PERFORMANCES—2 P. M. & 8 P. M. TENTS EAST BROADWAY AT 20TH ST. THERE WAS A GIRL CALLED “CHINA DOLL” Turbulent drama ‘of fierce loves; intense ‘hates, danger- ous intrigues in the colorful etting of the China Seas where “anything goes’! Es A Challenge to All Screen History Today - Sun. - Mon. Tues. SHOWS AT 2:30 - 7 - 9 DAILY ‘THE! IN with FRANK Mec NOW JIMMY HANDS YOU A LAUGH FOR EVERY THRILL HE GAVE YOU IN ‘G-MEN’ ...as the guy who halted the March of Crime is stop- pedcoldbyadame JIMMY CAGNEY PAT O'BRIEN JENKINS e OLIVIA DE HAVILLAND A First National Picture” Sure, ‘tis no private fight “Anyone can get in ;.t and the more the merrier .. . starting TONIGHT at the CAPITOL RISH US HUGH e ALLEN SEE JIMMY SOCK PAT ON HIS WILD IRISH NOSE... “and knock you out of your seat with laughter Wait Until I And We'll All Go O m for mentioning it, the he loves to eat there, and I know you'll enjoy it, too. They have such wonderful electrically-cooked food . . . and if you'll forgive me THE PATTERSON (Just Wonderful Food) ONLY FIRE-PROOF HOTEL IN BISMARCK Call the ver to the Patterson prices are so sensible.

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