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‘ AUSPSSREMS REGRSESR SLEEE. TIONCHECK, BACK IN CAPITAL, CUTTNG UP Rides Bicycle Islands Up and Down Apartment Halls in the capital Thursday with bride, a bicycle and some choice rum. He went straight to the apartment from which his belongings had been removed. Mrs. Benjamin J. Young. whose apartment had been sublet the legislator last Christmas eve, said last week that he had been dispos-| 5 of the sessed by the management apartment house. Enthusiastically greeting newsm the 35-year-old would be no trouble.” Mrs. Young was said by apartment] ¢ house employes to have gone to New York after clearing her rooms Zioncheck's clothes. After riding the bicycle—which brought back from the Virgin lands—up and down he was hungry. Accompanied by his bride and dozen newsmen he departed search of food. ‘American-Born Golfe Continues His Advance St. Andrews, May 28.—(#)—Robert | Mas. clea Sweeny, American-born golfer living | Parshall. in London, Thursday continued his|s: British amateur advance in the championship by defeating the veter: British Walker Cup player, Edward Storey, 2 and 1, in a fifth round match. | It was Sweeny’s second successive important conquest. Wednesday, in a fourth round en- counter, he eliminated Jack McLean, three times former Scottish champion, and co-favorite with Hector Thomp- son, another Scot, to succeed Lawson Sweeny disposed of McLean Little. one up after two extra holes. Cream Operators of North Dakota Unite) Cando, N. D., May 28.—(#)—Offi- cers and a board of directors were elected here Wednesday night at the organization meeting of the North Dakota Cream Operators association.| Miles City. Purpose of the group will be to “work for the bettermen of cream producers of the state and benefit cream buy- An} attempt will be made later, officers) said, to secure legislation favorable| srs in smaller towns and cities.” to carrying out policies to be put effect. Officers elected are Henry Jacob- Otillia son of Cando, president; Nickolay of Cando, treasurer; J. Marks of Cando, secretary; and W. Leach of Perth, W. M. Thomas M. T. Nickolay of Cando members the board of directors. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR RENT—Furnished 3 room mod- Rate | § ern apartment. Over Cut Drug. Phone 347. | PARAMOUNT, SHOWING TODAY S. S. VAN DINE’S Newest Philo Vance mystery | —from the current successful novel The Killer who left no clues! News - Carteen - Comedy BUDWEISER : Now 15c No Charge for the Bottle From Virgin representative ¢x- plained he was glad to see them. ‘Then he added he had two policemen open the door for him when he ar- rived shortly after midnight, “so there the carpeted hallway of the apartment house, and having his picture taken in many poses, the representative announced e ‘a his cloudiness, night and WEATHER FORECAST For Bismarck creasing cloudiness with local rs late tonigh Friday. For North For South loudiness, west, warmer south: Washington, May 28.—(4)—Marion | a 4 Z%. Zioncheck, Washington State's caper-cutting representative, was back | temperature lay local For Mont For Minnesota Dakota: Dakot and vici or Friday; owers oler west, artly cloudy little iy show cooler | Weather Report | In Increasing local showers west late) tonight or Friday and east Friday: | cooler extreme northwest tonight and |west and north portions Friday. Increasing extreme st tonight; Fri- | to- change in THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1986 ODGE CELEBRATES 25TH ANNIVERSARY i Sons of Norway Members From Several N. D. Cities Con- | vene at Mandan Speeches and songs in Norwegian jand English provided entertainment jat a 6:30 p. m., banquet in the First |Lutheran church and a program at 8 Fair tonight and/p. m., in Hudson hall Wednesday in Friday, except possibly northwest by Friday | afternoon or night; somewhat cooler in vicinity of Twin Cities tonight. to) GENER The ‘ometric press en, of he is- a in Pa ‘an. F.) | | in G. Cc. M of} x, Egeland, J. Zeman of Lankin and |¢ of | Pi BISMARC Garrison. Jamestown, Williston, Grand Hankins Lisbon. clear Napoleon, clear . Oakes, clear Wishek, | Minneapolis Moorhead. SOUTH DAKOTS over the Great Lakes while a low 0.08, centered over the n M Tountain slope, erally fair above the seasonal n out the northern districts Bismarck station baromet 28.18 Reduced to sea lev iri river hour chan Sunrine 4:54 Sunset $:26 p. Havre, 20.54, | rred in the southern | gi outhern Rocky Moun. | 880 jon, Chic north stage at ge 00 ft a.m, me For Bismarck mal, this mon January Station Total this month to date . th to date Total, January Ist to date Normal Accumulated deficiency to date ist to date Preci- ABO, is & ‘mal through- WESTERN NORTH DAKOTA rosby, P| Rickinson, clear Drake, clear oad Dunn ‘Center, clear .. lear clear ear clear anish, clear clear EASTERN NORTH DAKOTA Devils Lake, clear - dy. orks, pel n, clear clear MINNES clea clear Huron. clear Rapid City, pel MONT. Havre, clear Helena, clear K, peldy. ear clear DTA POINTS High- Low- clear showers in) Mandan to celebrate the 25th anni- |versary of Torghatten Lodge No. 113, Sons of Norway. | K. Alphson of Grand Forks, §. WEATHER CONDITIONS iodge organizer, was toastmaster at is bigh|the banquet. Speakers were Rev. O. }O. Andvik and W. F. McClelland in the English language and T. H. H. | Thoreson of Grand Forks in Norwe- There also were musical num- bers. Addresses by P. O. Sathre, attorney }general, from Bismarck and Mr. lodge brought by George Brekke, representative, were high- lights of the evening program. A public initiation ceremony was con- ducted Incidental features included songs by the audience, greetings by C. G. Byerly, president of the city commis- 71Sion, the response by Anton Olson, | President of the lodge, a tumbling act |by a group of boys, history of the lodge recounted by Peter Dahl and a play by a group of young people. Arnold Christianson, accompanied by Miss Camilla Andvik, sang. R. “io | Weibers contributed a violin solo. igh- Low- est 90 56 est 62 POINTS Pet. | 00, 00 High- Low- est est 80 5t 82 62 NA POINTS Pct. 00 00 High- Low- est est 9k 64 an 56 + 90 68 WEATHER AT OTHER POINTS High- Low- Amarillo, Tex., cldy Botse, Idaho, cldy Ci eldy, . clear Denver, Colo., cldy Des Moines, lo Dodge City, Kan Edmonton, Kamloops. B. ¢ Kansas Ci Alta. Alta., est clear eldy clear rain , clear . clear 7 Pet. 200 to tho 00 200 60 pa a fy a, Pat Comfortably Cool Capitol Last Time Today Glenda Farrell Margaret Lindsay “THE Vitaphon Musica! in — LAW IN HER HANDS” —Added— e Vaudeville 1 - - News 7 Sons of Norway members from sev- eral North Dakota cities joined in \the celebration. Among those attend- ing were Mr. and Mrs. O. Leonard and Mrs. O. N. Hagen, Gaylord Con- rad, Mr. and Mrs. Otto H. Harju and Mrs. M. O. Agree, all of Bismarck, and Capt. Joseph L. Erickson, quar- termaster at Fort Lincoln. CONTINUED from page one: x Gigantic Parade to Open Memorial Day Services in Capital form, which will be festooned with, | the flags of all of the participating | groups. H. A. Brocopp, assistant adjutant general, and H. D. Harding will have charge of marking the graves of the | war dead in Bismarck’s two ceme- | teries. Parade Plans Listed Further plans for the parade, which it is predicted will be larger than any staged here since the Armistice was | Signed ending the World war, were }announced Thursday by Adjutant |General Frayne Baker, parade mar- shal, The Lions, Kiwanis and Rotary service clubs will furnish cars for the |War Mothers, nurses and all veter- ans unable to march with their or- | ganizations. The American Legion Drum and | Bugle corps, the Fort Lincoln Fourth Infantry band, and the Bismarck | High School band will furnish the jmusic for the marchers and the \1.0.0.F. drill team is also scheduled “(3 | to take part. Heads of all veterans’ organizations nd their auxiliaries have urged their mbers to participate in the parade 25 and present indications are that ap- proximately 1,000 persons will be in the line of march, which will move from the intersection of Second St. and Broadway Ave. promptly at 110:15 a. m. PRINCESS WEDS WAITER Athens, May 23.—()—Princess Aza, sister of King Ghazi of Iraq, and a young hotel waiter named Anastase Charalambis were married secretly here Tuesday. Orvedal, Mr. and Mrs. A. Risem, Mr./&® Makes Hold-in-One | On Hawaii Course Mrs. C. M. Burgess, daughter of iMrs. William Barneck, 612 Ninth &t., made an ace at the Kapahulu golf course in Hawaii, according to @ newspaper clipping which she sent home. Mrs. Burgéss, the former Miss Grace Tait, was married to Dr. Bur- gess, a native of Devils Lake, in Hawaii and has made her home there since. Dr. and Mrs. Burgess and their daughter, Mary Ann, will come to the United States in July of 1037 and will visit both here and at Devils Lake. She made the hole-in-one at the 110-yard No. 2 hole of the Kapahule |course which is located on the terri- torial fair grounds. She will receive a special trophy from the Dawkins Benny company, sponsor of the. club’s hole-in-one club which now has oot playing wit Bre. FB Doolile was with Mrs. F. E. ttle at the time. Before her marrisge, Mrs. Burgess Thoresen and greetings from the su- {played on the municipal links here : | preme and also at Bottineau. Her address is 1902 Komata Drive, Honolulu, T. H. CONTINUED from page one Terrorists Boast They Can Mobilize Million Men Quick had as its primary purpose defense against Communistic uprising when, and if, it should come. If all of the Black Legion units, or- ganized along military lines, are at full strength, McCrea said, the Black Legion has 135,000 members in Michi- in. V. F. Effinger of Lima, Ohio, spokes- man for the national organization of the Legion, claimed a total member- ship of 6,000,000 the country over. “Bome of the members seem to the idea thet the leaders of the to establish @ dictator- . There seems to be that they had delusions of Other States Speak Up Prosecutor McCrea said he had re- ceived letters from persons in 15 or 18 states, among them Ohio, Pennsyl- vania, New York, Mlinois and Colo- tado, ascribing acts of intimidation a to the robed and hooded er. Upon those letters he based his ap- peal to United States Attorney Gen- eral Cummings late Wednesday for a federal investigation. Four men are in custody, under $10,000 bond, in connection with the flogging of Harley Smith, Norvell, Mich., who said he was given six lashes for failure to attend meetings of the Black Legion. At Detroit, the court examination of 12 Black Legion members accused of the slaying of Charles Poole, that brought the organization into the lumelight, was in adjournment until next Tuesday. An unverified informant told the Detroit News that Poole, although a Catholic, obtained membership in the Black Legion by saying he was a Prot- estant. That report said Poole was killed because he “made fun of” the order in the presence of a relative who also was @ member, without his knowledge. Mrs. John C. Schulz, Linton, Dead at 41 | Mrs. John C. Schulz, 40, of Linton died at 12:15 a. m. Thursday in a local hospital. She had been at the | hospital since April 5. Funeral serv- ‘ices will be Sunday at Linton with | Rev. John Schindler officiating. In- | terment will be at Linton. Mrs. Schulz | was born May 3, 1895, in North Da- | kote. s her husband she leaves | four chiMiren, four sisters and one | brother. MEMORIAM DAY PROGRAM Fri. - Sat. - Sun. It’s ore FUN THAN BRIGHT LIGHTS. COLMAN: COLBERT cLAGLEN - with Gregory Ratoff + Nigel Bruce RUSSELL C. Henry Gordon * Herbert Mundin AND A CAST OF 10,000 eDARRYLF. ZANUCK 20th Century Production Presented by Joseph. Schenck » Directed by Freak Lloyd pleted the prescribed course with first Fourteen other seniors also received | rank in his class at the age of 15. their diplomas Friday. Painting and Decorating at O’Brien’s Fifth Street Cafe. James Ashmore 6 ON WAY TO GRAVES KILLED AT GROSSING Four Women and Two Children Die En Route to Chicago Suburb Cemetery Late News Bulletins (By the Asseciated Press) 80 CAKE EATERS ILL Billings, Mont.—Serious illness of more than 60, persons’ and possibly one death was attributed Thursday by Dr. A. E. Stripp, city health officer, ‘commercial cake filling.” DELAY TAX VOTE Chicago, May 28.—(4)—Six persons, four women and two small children, members of a party en route to a cemetery to decorate graves for M morial day, were killed. Thursday when their automobile was struck by|to the inbound Logansport local of the ; Pennsylvania railroad in Calumet City, Ill. The victims all lived at Washington-—-The senate fi- Calumet City. nance committee postponed its PAINTER DECORATOR Calumet City police said the car| crucial vote on approval of the 220 Main Bismarck’ Phone 1326 was driven directly into the path of the Chicago-bound in and was carried for more than a thousand feet before the engineer could bring the train to a halt. Some of the bodies were hurled from the car and strewn along the right-of-way. The crossing is protected by &. flasher signal, officials of the railroad said. tax bill Thureday because some members said they felt, as # mat- ter of “courtesy,” President Roo- sevelt should be told first of an unwillingness to accept his latest suggestions. FDR GETS CONTROL Wahisngton—The senate Thursday approved without debate an amend- : ment to the deficiency appropriation PROBE OF VICE RING rs Jerusalem—British troops returned the fire of rioters at Kubatia, North Man and Woman Picked Up for Questioning in White Slave Palestine, Th two and Traffic Case When you have this type of work to be done, let us give an estimate. Work and Fixtures at O’Brien’s new Fifth Street Cafe - Installed by W. F. MEYER PLUMBING CO. PLUMBING — HEATING — GAS FITTING “Work done a little better than seems necessary” 808 NINTH ST. BISMARCK PHONE 964 wounding three. British officers re- ported they suffered no casualties. Percy F. Moore Is Laid to Rest Here Minneapolis, May 28-—()—Rederal| , Many beautiful oral otters agents stepped actively into the Min-jdence of the sympathy of Chicago neapolis and northwest white slave |riends as the body of Percy F. Moore investigation Thursday by picking UP} was buried Thursday morning in St. a man and a woman for questioning. |xgary’s cemetery beside that of his The woman, once employed in %/ mother, Mrs. Christina Robidou. Minneapolis disorderly house slready te Mr. Moore died Sunday in linked to an e:#ensive vice ayndicate,| Chicago of » ruptured appendix. His was understood to have given agents | sister, Mrs. Arthur Bauer, 711 Sixth : SS a additional information on the activi-|st, had been summoned there and » ties of Rayfield Johnson, and Rufus | grrived here Wednesday noon with the Brown, Negroes, suspected panderers. | corpse. ® Both the man and woman were re-| Rev. Henry Holleman read the leased after questioning. Meanwhile| funeral mass at 8 9. m., Thursday in 2 the trial of Rayfield Johnson on 8/8t. Mary's procathedral. The ritual at charge of enticing an 18-year-old|the grave was performed by Rev. white girl into a disorderly house,|Robert A. Feehan. . was delayed by another case. Active pallbearers were Henry Hal- 4 Police and federal agents Thursday |vorson, Charles Fisher, Dan McDon- still were hunting Dave Kraft, indict-|ald, Harry Homan, E. E. Vesperman ed on charges of operating a resort.|and Thomas B. Cayou. Mrs. Moore, who still is recuperat- ing from a major operation, was un- Fighting Breaks Out able to come to Bismarck for the Near Auto Factories| (evant his er oY ™ Paris, May 28.—(?)—Fighting broke out late Thursday at the doors of the St. Anthony Student great Renault auto factories in Bou- a A A pisisd cepaernicar strategic sector on Wins Ww. Award a swiftly spreading strike of 45, Valley City, N. D., May 28.—(®) French mechanics. White collar work-|rne antheneum Society received Aor ers, many of them belonging to the) srongon award at the annual class day Lt Nationalist Croix de Feu movement, | exercises on the Valley City State Fifth tried to break through pickets who pea rrattitranty oi Teachers college commencement week ADD 10% FOR MAIL ORDERS During the after the strike | PTGS Tray, OE ee ‘J shed _ mathian groups placed first and sec- Dr. L penetrated to the Fiat automobile| ong respectively for this award based r. Lyons 19 factory and involved 15,000 hands at}on activity interest and scholarship. 25¢ Tooth Powder .... Cc the Citroen motor works. Workers in| "ys Asnes ‘Klein of St. Antheny, sp 25c Shoe Cleaner i ao factories alsol1e Dp. received the W.A.A. ring sward Bayer Aspirin 49c Bele tasicsiba ibaweeke os outstanding g ork. in. the women 's (200 tn bottle) ...... White Ace, ers in some instances held plant of-|" The 44th commencement exercises Peroxide One White, ficials virtual prisoners, waved red| ror 108 students, 18 of whom will re- 2Se bottle ngs and chanted the “Internation-| ceive B.A. degrees, wil be held Friday ee Shu-Milk . morning. Bromo-SeltzerD 1 Medal Proposed for |Ormsby-Gore Named 4 Stewardess Heroine} To Succeed Thomas Washington, May 28.—(#)—Repres-| London, Ma: 38.0) —Prime = enlattis ree (Dem.-Mich.) introd- | ister Baldwin ‘Thursday made Willan uced a bill ursday to authorize |George Arthur Ormsby-Gore, former |B mm ‘OWS*r -------- Postmaster General Farley to award oe 4 postmaster general, colonial secre-: an airmail service medal to honor|tary. The new cabinet minister, who Nellie Granger, airline stewardess wh0| is 51 years old and a conservative, pulled two injured passengers from &| succeeds J. H. Thomas, the Laborite plane wreck near Uniontown, Pa.,| who resigned from the ministry last 44c Rev. Vater to Deliver — Ree Water ... LOC Two Graduation Talks| Legion Sons to Get Ste Woodburys Almond Parade Drill Friday — Rev. Walter E. Vater, pastor of the McCabe Methodist Episcopal church,| ll members of Squadron I, Sons of Evening in Paris Per- will deliver the commencement ad-|the American Legion, have been ask- fume, dress to the graduating class of the Sterling high school at 8 p. m., to- night. Rev. Vater has chosen “The Investment of Life” as his topic. Fri- day night he will speak to the grad- uating class of the Menoken high school on “Building a Career.” od to be present at 7:30 p. m., Friday at the William Moore school for in- structions on marching in prepara- tion for the Memorial Day exercises Saturday. Lieut. Paul Hedstrom of the North Dakota National Guard will act as instructor. Federal Securities : Offer Boosts Debt c° plety -D Tabiets ........696 Washington, May 28.—(#—Ofter- Quins Broadcasting Sane 98c ings of $2,050,000,000 in government securities, including ‘$1,000,000,000 to build up the cash balance, will floated Monday by the treasury. The cash offering will increase the gross public debt to $32,590,000,000 on basis of present treasury.figures. poeta aad ay JAMES FOUND GUILTY Los Angeles, May 28.—()—Robert 8. James, 39, master barber, found gullty Wednesday on morals charges involving his 21-year-old niece, Lois Wright. NESS = NESS) |K On Second Birthday snesce “good fhe epee = AOC z charges. ‘The quiet little physician seid the children were in better health than ever. g iller’s Last Request Is for Glass of Milk $1.25 Vantine’s' Dusting Pow- _.. der and Toilet Water Columbus, Omaha, Neb., at the national convention Ashley, N. D., May 28—Ashley former body. claims to have one of the year's