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PAGE TWELVE TEN AVIATORS | OF EXPERIENCE ON SOUTH TOUR Army Commanders Pick Men For Flight Who Are Com- petent Aerial Engineers San Antonio, Dec. 17.—)—Ten men who have taken a ading part in developing the army air service, by d the da work every day and leaving spectacular : s to others, will pr planes that or 7 ‘Amer. America ¢ » West service headquarters ask of rious flying » country to recommend men to make the. flight the request t those men recom nd master flyers who de- or. ‘The obtain men who had s glamour and fam spectacular lights to all of their time to the less noticeable, but equally im portant phases of conquering the cir Competent Engin All of the flyers are competent and all ha had » in the army Dargue is the old; which ranges betwe 0 years in age. Major Darg Point, later the in the Philip} a wirel iy in charge tructions in the appointment | ce was sign: | jot the “New Yor! re of the dition, with | Lieutenant Ennis ¢ y sr lief pilot. Lieutenant Whitehead, born in Kansas and gr: from the Univer: Kansas, has ha extensive engineering training anc signal corps work. captain A, B. McDaniel, who second in command will fly the H Antonio” just to the right and be: | hind the lew York”, was born and | educated in Texas and has done most | of his flying here. ars he |! y red to the aviation ‘whil occupation, He will fly wi tenant ©. M. K of Ohio Pee td . Baker, third a | | heciise he s| n the west | wH] round | Francisco spent a gr at Rockwell F d ompanion, ild, was educated in Wa ¢ university and lear Malian’ army. intenance Officer h roit,” which will be the last plane on the right leg of the V will be in command of Captain Clin- native of Michigan. ognition of Captain Wools technical knowledge he has — bi maintenance officer and will ye 2 of adjusting and tuning the planes. He flys with Lieutenant John W. Benton, a Californian and a of the Univer: of Cali Ae Lieutenant Benton, as did mast of the Pan American crew, rose from a p: = as had expe- rience in 9 very field in this country and is considered a| crack all-round airman Lieutenant Bernard S. Thomp a native of Florida, will pilot last ship on the left leg of the V, the St. Louis. air service communications His companion, Lieutenant} D. Weddington, is the third si ak He od Pe Most of the itlters have . famil Leases Being << on m Land Near Wing i pos- y of finding oil in Kidder :oun- ty is seen in reports that numcrous leases recently have been taken on Tand near Wing. Wing is only a few miles from Robinson were A. C. Town! time Nonpartisan League started to drill a year ago. later abandoned the work. said he would not “prove-up” tue until he could get all the the vicinity. It is rumored that toe new leases are being acquired for the Townley interests. GET $4.50 TERMS Lynn, Mass.—Twelve Lynn boys, from 12 to 15 years old, were arrest ed for indow smashing recently. Judge Ralph B. Reeve, of the Ju- venile court sentenced them to earn): $4.50 each and pay for the panes they | -| What a few hours’ bucking a snow-laden gale a! - WALSH HELPS GOULD TO LEARN HOW He is a graduate of |, j | Pathetic THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE oet, and a business man, Ferguson: imself. “The trustees are | slowly’ in their decisio! persons are worthy and important,” Dr. Kaltenbach said. iaee e is a building in Paris called Among , New Crustacean --An Ice-coated “Lobster naking haste to what at events the mausoleum of monuments. There another mausoleum,” BiG 60 NAMED 10 SOLVE BIG TEN TANGLE Committee Including Presi- dents and Regents to Meet in Chicago Next Month Minneapolis, Minn. Dec. 17.—The University of Minnesota expects to have a full representation meeting of the Committee of Sixty in Chicago next month at which an ef- fet is to be made to unsnarl all the in Western Conference athle- tee including the harassing schedule problem. Plans for the meeting were announced in Chicago by Major John L, Griffith, athletic commissioner of the conference. Major Griffith's letter indicates that the meeting will be the most im- portant in the history of the confer- ence, in which view it is known that the presidents of most of the con- ference universities agree with him. hide vin ae story and es yet an- x i | nounced is the possibility that even at sea did to the lobster smack Grace M. Cribby was tH je: ccneaules workea watia Chicago at the coaches’ meeting in November revised by the general con- in January. It will be at- tended by the presidents of the ni hoards of regents, faculty representa- ments “commemorat- | tives, alumni representatives, direc- or women of America| tors and coaches. of all institutions it events of American “lin the western conference: “Fountain of Time A thing which is certain is that the BOY FELT WHEN CAUGHT IN JAM POT T ___ Jexisting annual conflicts in schedule A f the trustees’ idea; arrangements, the occasional hos- DLW TOCK REPORT t event is Lorado|tilities and rectiminations that have Tatts “F of Time,” celebrat-] sometimes accompanied schedule oa the s and more of] meetings will be done away with for following of the}a long time to come if the Big Sixty tr uty of Ghent in 1815, The sub-} work out their plans in the way many “t was proposed by Mr. Taft and]of them are hoping to do. by the Daughters of the American] Whether or not the mecting means Revolution. that Western Conference athletics, is “Figures resembling the mailed} really peeping into the lair of the swashbucklers of the Dark Ages, in] famous giant, “Faculty Control,” can treat,” said C “Kaltenbach, regis-| be determined only by the outcome of the museum of the Institute, of the meeting, but is it obvious, with plaining he conception, “sig-] so many interests represented, that of the wat, marching | no single group will be in control of of human experience,|the bigger committee. to give way to a new era of peuce, form of the group suggests dent upon her return to Boston Harbor. It took axes, elbow grease and the sun many hours to free the vessel of her unwonted refrigeration. for the erection in Chicago of “en- that unfortunate sort of a coun- Washington, Dee. } ache which suggests that its had reac! 2 fia rd c 4 nee to social recognition and had finall is constantly smelling an un- heen. invited to a function which | pleasant odor. t the atts nt-of a life's de-| The charges against him, which must be supported and substantiated hefore Gould will be in xetual peril, {will be studied by the committee on privileges and elections. Thus far, ha one has undertaken to express to any. beli ‘threshed out aie during his election Grea: Anedaneoment va Major Griffith's announcement of mekich tins the meeting says that matters to be dred mE IE” “Forth nt signalized | discussed will include. the following: maghificent experiment of the] “1. Is the conference a playing Monuments Made of i ified, “ungarrisoned Can= infirs The conference was orig- ie P y constituted for’ the purpose of Worthy Immortals|#ie bound lishing cligibility, rules common | Six Already Chosen to all of the institutiops which make Art knows no geographical bound-|up the conference ‘and for the pur- f twenty leading rons a as shown when the trustees] pose of establishing athletic stand- slav, Ivan Mestrovie, rds. A great many of the alumni 3 in the public-eye to-| and the public are fiupisting, however, nts in American life deserve for probable eree-| that the conference should determine .of stone or bronzejtion on 4 igan Boulevard a colos-| championships each year, and with right to enter the senate in, deliberately, in the| sal bronze memorial to the American} that in mind are contending that do that a committee in i guson monument Indian, It is being cast in Mestro-} schedules should be arranged for rs of bribery which had been ynjamin Franklin Ferguson vie's workshop at Vagleb. - |that purrose, brought against him. 1905 left a million dollars, v Monuments to individuals, thus} “2. Schedules. The. question of ‘An Embarrassing Moment his entire estate,:to be administered far, commemorate a statesman, a! rotating schedules. — simuitancone ji nan sifela” NON the tr sof the Art Institute | musician, a missionary-explorer, a home and home-gam: moment. for M the 3 for any the embarrass ing his tro! court, h the just ve in’ the sea of time, a billow formally received oy the Four Hun And then some fat, but all-powe ful dowager had raiged her lorgnc and proclaimed icily and loudly t you were the fellow who had kis her kitchen om several back icazo, Dec. (P) innocent or guilty, have felt Arthur R. felt when Senator ah of Montana quostloned hin to the au ld, ready to be Massuch | sworn in with Wale hoof tts, Hawes of Missouri t of Towa. It musth Spot in his reer—and Walsh of Montana arose and the chair, it beeame the most mal, All fou long with their spon: and colleague: were * st aula front of the rostrum by President Dawes. As Walsh a don, Gould’s appearance was pe The most hard-boiled h in the Senate must have felt for hi And that Sabarcusmenel Bt hangs over Gould. As green as grass in the chamber, the pe man has the shadow of) possible expulsion over him, despite his protests that his associates and not he put up the $100,000 contribution for the New Brunswick premier’s camp which might aid their — railre | projects. A Modest Man He may ha fierey cam- ener in the Pine Tree state, but is the least of them all in’ the where he succeeds Under the ‘om Walsh, he look. Once or twi a smile to his colleag Hale, but it was not a ah would be very happy would let him alone. Gould bit his lip once—when spoke of the senate’s right! itself of “incompetents and * It is a thin lip, \ and Gould, though: itis had destroyed. Here’s Way to Your House Which Santa Finally Found | friends say he i “25 Nota Speck of Soot! (puts the beauty of a Hotpoint Electric Range. The cooking utensils are always clean as new. It is less work to wash them and that means legs time in the kitchen. The kitchen walls and ceilings, too, are cleaner. The old smudge that used to appear above the range shortly after re-decorating is no longer present. With a Hotpoint. Range the kitchen is as clean as any room in the house _—and it is easier to keep clean. compacta and interseetional gemes|/tend. He is at the Mayo Clinic, discussed. Fqualit Rochester, is rina tl J i obasere So cae ee ing in a game shall observe one code rules, so the conference French Opera to Siedorieles are ests of equal an ure deposited the herocs of yester-| that it is further necessary ¢! day who have been taken from their/ ten conference universities respect pedestals, We do not want to aad borat yt in the matters sage led playing conditions e | \wailt request the presidents, faculty |first and great one, will have the partment to farmers who | Tepresentat ies, the Jotners to ai “niform agi n ‘fect the ten universities alike in the |of Destiny,” will be shown at that matter of remission of tuition, if| famous playhouse. there be Raed ine the granting of while there is ery little proselyting | The scene of the big review, with the integitimate recruiting on the|“Little Corporal” passing before his vart of the conference. universities, ‘sebac! yetthere has been no prescribed uni- aurm standard binding all versities alike in the pe It. is probable that ¢ not take place until Dr. C. W. Spears, | leon,” the port of Minnesota coach, is in shape to at-|ly set bi ae ee ’ SUPER-AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC RANGES other adweneages of tha Hotpetns Hic Rang _ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1926 history, in order that the famous Minnesota —_ recovering j siege might be cameracd. of competition. It|from a major operation. Hail Department ‘Sends Warrants Show Movie Film Worth a Million About Napoleon pee Warrants heel $1,255,624 are Paris, Dec. 17—)—Napoleon, the | being sent out by the state hail de- ed in the inter- fair Lape, ition at the instance, the directors | insured ‘alumni’ and the| honors of the Paris Opera when the | their crops with the state this yeur. t them in reaching u|™ost pretentious French film to date,| All of the checks will be in the ment which’ shall af-|dcaling with the career of “The Man|hands of the farmers by December 23, according to present large force having been “Napoleon” cost 12,000,000 franes | the work. mF warrants ips, loan funds, the activi-|to make, and no less than 4,000|in cash, the rtment of alumni secretaries, and so|French soldiers and sailors now on| having a Balance of $2,780,000 to its The directors believe that,| active service took part in the film.| credit with WHICH TO WAG? tendon J. Dunkerly, a Sheffie! ous paintings by Meixsonier, is thant, has a cat *ynteh (aon aid to be one of the most impres- faew which of its tails to wag. e sive features of the production. Persian freak, _s recently, has two For one of the noes of “Napo- | head: perfect legs, and two tails, ‘oulon was literal- m of course, to the usual over a hundred years in| nine lives. on the the uni- e meeting will Announcing the opening of The Hotel Prince and Cafe at Bismarck, N. D. December 15, 19, Arthur J. Kredler Manager Solve Your perpompe” A ’ Problem at one of: ATWATER KENT RADIO STORES cost of presents you perl cofinnaiy give ATWATER ime aly will uy cea thet will , tp of cndinting benchs sad plonmuss, an asset to ‘ your home. i There is an ATWATER KENT RADIO 0 pleue, every taste and suit purse. The new ONE SET a marvel of and perfection—will ticularly interest you. who wish, conv teems may be arranged. Ask for a demonstration at ne of these stores or st your bome. : WIN-C ; h ae