The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 28, 1927, Page 8

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! Pace ricHT EXPLORER T0 SPEAK HERE NEXT MONTH Amundsen, South Pole Dis-| ccverer, Will Tell of Flight Over North Pole * THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1927, Not High Priced _ GOODYEAR TIRES ARE NOT HIGH PRICED Although they are the standard of highest quality, you can get a GOODYEAR for as little as you are asked to pay for an ordinary tire—maybe even less. When the whistle of the Hughes) AM MDE | /#] Won't You Drop in and Let Us Quote THE BISMARCK TRiBUND. Hollywood Murder Principals in Court CHEST DRIVE BEGINS HERE | TOMORROW, | City’s Quota, ‘in C Campaign a at $5,000—All_ Prepara- tions Are Completed Incidents of the historic trip on which he and his companions flew over the North Pele will be told by Captain. Roald Amundsen, famed Arctic explorer, when he speaks here May 11. ‘He is ap- under the auspices of the ation of Commerce. Now 55 rs old, Amundsen has announced that he is through with exploration work and he is) making a aking tour of the i ates, telling four of the - = RAH: vecicne, ihe has ales dy Dorothy Mackaye, stage tavorite, fainted several t mes during the grand jury quiz at Los Angeles into spoken before enthusiastic audi. the death of her husband, Ray Raymend, musical comedy star, following a fist fight with Paul Kelly.| ences at Fargo, Grand Forks. and) In the picture at the right she is drinking water after recovering, while Helen Wilkinson, a friend, | Minot. helds her hand. To the left is Kelly, who has been indicted for murder. New interest will his appearance here that marks the day to a Amundsen started on his ep flight over the pole in the ai | ible Norge. Has Adventurous Life Amundsen’s life has been fraught with adventure since he abandoned his books and study for a medical profession at the age of 19, and went to sea in a Nor- wegian whaler. Included among the outstanding achievements of his life is the discovery of the south pole, where he planted the Norwegian flag December 14, 1911 After running a spectacular race with four other expeditions ! representing as many nations. Amundsen arrived at the pole just 34 days before the ill-fated expe dition of the British Antarctic party, headed by Captain R. F. Scctt, reached there. An expedition headed by! Amundsen was the first to make | the sail through the Northwest} | be added to) - “a LONG SIEGE OF POVERTY WILL FOLLOW FLOOD ‘People Elsewhere Do Not Grasp Extent of Devasta- tion in River Valley | fe Deepa ecebetorton ler, (BY BRUCE CATTON) Memphis, Tenn. April 28,—(NEA) J and T’looked and behold ja Pale Horse; and his name that sat Jon him was I The Mississippi valley region to- day is one vast valley of desolation. Beneath the sedden rain clouds chat a driving wind whips low over the Waste of waters, over | Electric company’s plant is biown| rae at 9 o'clock tomorrow. morning, | on the Size You Need? j Bismarck’s initiay Community | Mies campaign will begin, with 2 va a LAHR MOTOR SALES COMPANY All’ plans for the drive have | been completed, with the threc| $ service clubs, the Business and| . Professional Women’s club, the/| Women’s Community Couneti and | in el ‘Ss to! Rae ae Jeri ta . Mie raphers in all down-town business | | requested to report to the associa- | Girls, Boys’ Welfare Work, So- On the committee in charge of |Places, clinics and hospitals, as’ tion offices. |ciety for the Friendless, North Da- the campaign are Henry J. Dueme- | Well as at the capitol. e Wom-! Officials of the chest, agai kota Children’s Home and Flor- land, chffirman; A. E. Brink, Carl|en’s Community Council will be in| made it clear that the ence Crittenden home. Nelson, G. L, Spear and Mrs. F. L.|charge of the house-to-house can- ;drive is ‘heing conducted without : Conklin. al) a es cores Alaa 1 a Kees ein ene heed elt 2 Kilts als an eg on | ions club to hel . L. George has been named jout that in other cities, outside | i | gorvtim delve’ eeertare we Sny_ | chairman of the solicitors covering |help had been called in and paid | lSoretine: not adopted in an economy before the flood came, Bank after! the freakest weather in history.ider, Joe Spies, W. B. Couch,|the traveling salesmen who make to assist in “ot fo) said Sn | bank has been forced to close its| Torrential rains, as great as 14/‘thomas Cooper, G. L. Spea Abe |their headquarters at Bismarck | but here all the work is being done MACE Garvin an Docday ema’ in Oho doors; when the flood is over many inches in 10 hours, have increased /Tolchinsky, Gerald Richholt, Jack|and Mrs. C. H. Schoregge, chair- by local people, without charge. | county, jail, es “Los Angeles mon ingee will Tiavorte fOuaw eats the flood menace. ‘One is reminded |Feck, Joe Hutchinson, Luther|man of the Women’s Community — Organizations Boy Seoute, Sal: found that he had been sentenced to Fifty years of progress have of the bibtical torrents, that fell Monson, “Herman Brocopp and R.|Council committee, will have 120 this drive are the Scouts, Sal-|the city jail and had to serve the been knocked out by the rising/for 40 days and 40 nights. The |M |B Barneck. ladies assisting her and her com-!vation Army, Women's Community| sentence again in the proper place waters. Charity is needed, badly;|skies have remained leaden, day ae jmittee im the house-to-house can- Council, Juvenile Band, Campfire! of confinement. put more than charity will be re-|after day. In other parts of the) The Rotary club has named B. | mittee T hy tess ot WE quired in the Mississippi valleyqeountry there are cyclones and|Q, Ward, Hal Dobler, J. C. Tay-| vass. The other members o! rs. this summer. Outside capital must; tornadoes with | premature “heat /Jor, Henry Murphy, J.P. Jack- Soa ick committee are Mrs. pour in if the whole region is not! waves,” quickly followed by almost|son, Dale Simon, Dr. | Harry| W erry and Mrs. H. F. Kel- to sink into one of the worst aan ps temperatures. Brandes, Frank Murphy, Theodore ‘aWhen tne, feed? pbap abaae | @eeeieed: aan Gott Hee soaan RN | igslettaes ate oo rues ach v 3 vani wman, solicitors are to mect at the libe: oBnes tere Hae Hee =| Local Men Granted FY ‘gs ee N. site Bystrom Association of Commerce offices ti ra nie? : rAd cones sai Harry Hinson, Ww. A. Me! nald, at 9 o’clock tomorrow morning to reac yet; one gets the 'y y . inpreision, in’ going tutoeEh the| Full Title to Glen 'J. E. Melton, mF Me Moule, J. | get final {nstractiona, When they devastated region, that the waters, a ‘agner and E. W.|complet . somehow are'hot xolng torecde'| Ulin Coal Property, Smith: 3 4 seems as if nature, dissatisfied with | | ‘Ten Others Named the Mississippi valley, had under-| Full title to about 800 acres °f! In addition to the service club Earning Walley inte Takes anal il coal land cast of Glen Ullin was’ solicitors, 10 other men have been into islands, and wiping out the re-/fanted The Glen Utlin Trust, alnamed to canvass the downtown sults of decades of slow toil. group of local men, by Judge H. L.|district. They are Alex Rosen, A Contrast—Only the Red Cross | Berry in Morton county district court | J, L. Mullin, R. F. Flint, C. J. Sip- One wonders, too, what the coun-! Tuesday. |ple, A. H. Olson, Joe Kelley, S. H. try at large would do if it could be! A shaft has been sunk on the prop made to realize the extent of the! erty and equipment and machinery | |Hollingsworth, . C. Leonard, jE. J. Gobel and E. B. Klein, passage. Starting in 1903, the explorer piloted his craft to King | William Land, about midway be tween the Arctic and Atlantic At King William Land sel was frozen in for two but in July, 1906, it freed | elf ‘and one month later reached ring Strait and the Pac! CLEANUP PLANS ': ARE DISCUSSED, Lions’ Committee Works Out Final Details of Project— routs to Cooperate Final plans for Bismarck’s an nual “Clean-up” Week, sponsored by the Lions club, were made last night at a meeting of clean-up committee members at the Associ- ation of Commerce rooms, Prizes to be given the squadrons of Boy Scouts who do the most efficient work in canvassing the city were decided on, and the committee discussed the possibil- ity of awarding some individual | The prizes to the most efficient work- | ers, | The cit: has been divided into ts, are to be can- vassed by “the scouts. The boys will first go out Monday of next week, to determine where there are rubbish piles and unsightly spots | and will give home-owners at such spets cards urging them to clean them up. The latter part of the week another tour will be made tc see how many of these places have been cleaned up. To Put Up Map A map of the city is to be | placed in a prominent window in some downtown store and red pins: will be placed in it to show thei location of rubbish heaps. When these are cleaned up, white pins will be put in place of the red| pins. In case some home-owners re- fuse to clean up their yards or do not attend to it, the city commis-; sion is to be notified, and wi!l take steps to sce that the work is! done. The two scout troops are to meet tomorrow night to be as-| signed the districts they will c: vass. The divisions of the city are made so that there are approx- imately 16 blocks in each one. To} each division, the plan is to as- sign four scouts, or one for eacn four blocks. Members of the com- mittee will give final instructions | to the boys at this time. The committee, at its meeting | last night, also decided to pure to the other service clubs for aid in seeing that the downtown di trict is cleaned up. While the | majority of business places pose properly of their rubbish, , some of them do not, they say., The clubs will be asked to sec! that all unsightly apcis in this district are taken care of. Introducing the Governors ' i - Des Moines, Iowa, April 28.—() Governor John, straphanger. Hammill, chief executive of lowa,, rides up to Capitol Hill most morn- | ings from his hotel residence on the! trolley. He hasn't time to bother! with a motor car of his own, and| thinks he makes better time without | one. When he’s in a hurry he takes | a ta He likes nothing better than to, watch a horse race. He doesn’t ikes to garden, and his! is near his home EY Britt are models of neatne: There is @ tradition that any tenant who lets| @ picket get -out of place on the front fence hears quite promptly from Governor John. iments in house plants showed that an‘excess of te ‘pedeo smoke in the air was fatal t gtowth. |farms will at 50,000" people are homeless and one who hear the ostly Horsemen of | mission of famine, pe: th down a thousand-mile pathway uts through the heart of the continent. For mile on uncounted mile the horizon has dissolved in waste Oo! Tl as become a ve burst thelt bonds, and towns, ages, plantations and homesteads dissolving before their waves by A Great Disaster st of the country does not the extent of the flood’s ation and the imperative need eal relief work. It dues not realize that southern f eit will take at five years for the south to re- r from this blow; that the flood . the greatest reconstruction will + when and bear in mind that the waters have not yet reached r Will be as serious as the valley ides have lost thing in the swirling flood Fully 3,000,000 acres under jay. The property damage probably will be at least $100,000,0uu. death toll of storms and floods dy is close to 150. states lie directly in the path of the ghostly riders of desolation. The Mississippi and its tributaries have inundated western Kentucky, southeastern Missouri, the eastern half of Arkans western Tennessee and western Mississippi. On Wild Rampage In most of these states the flooded area extends 25 miles_in- land for the full length of the Mis- sissippi. In Arkansas a strip of 50 square, miles known as the St, Fran- cis basin under water. The Mississippi in its wild rise has abandoned its old channel, in many places. and is ruthlessly! ‘eutting out a new on miles re- moved. It is making lands whole citics. It is cutting some towns in half. It is transferring farms and plantations from one state to another, alr Lands prepared for spring pactar| are under water. Thousands of be totally unproductive this year and next. A huge section of the south will have to live on credit for many, many months-—pos- sibly a few years. Credit Badly Needed But the credit machinery too is meng Swept away on the raging flood tides, carried downstream with the more tangible assets like barns and houses and corn cribs. The bad | cotton r had already taxed banks in this region to the utmost. Nearly jevery farmer in the affected neigh- oorhood was already in debt, cither to the corner store or to his bank, Good, Honest Dentistry Has made for us hosts of satisfied patients and boosters. May we add you to this list? Beau- tiful Dentistry at right prices. We invite com- parison. TD oston Dental Company ismarck Dental Clinic Dr. Kern, Mgr. Lucas Bidg. Phone 281 of | damage, | In Nicaragua something like thousand Americans faced possible property loss, and upwards of 5,000| marines and bluejackets were hurried | to the scene to protect them In China American Ii and property were menaced by civil w fare and a whole fleet, with three | regiments of marines, went there as! fast as they could be sent. But here, in the heart of the con-! tinent. more than 50,000 people have lost their homes and every bit of property they own. They are hud- dled in’ refugee camps, where the pestilence and famine’ brought by the Four Horsemen are stalking in broad daylight. And the Red, Cross is the only national organization on duty! Freak Weather worst of the story has not The Missouri river is ng alarm to a section as The in| 7© Mississippis, a edy and ruin o St. ouls an worried tell the w . What the next few days may hold no one can tell. This spring brought some of JAMESTOWN ENGINEER CREDITS HEALTH TO TANLAC E. M. Lacey, Box 476, Jamestown, N. D., tells his experience. | Leng hours and hard work sapped strength and health. | In fine fettle now, he gives due credit to this wonder tonic Mr. Lacey is active, energetic, ; alert, But when his stomach trouble developed, his nerves snapped and be became listless and “Fo a full year,” he said, was in mis: ! tery. Even the lighest food caused | jaeute pain in the pit of my stomach, | ;1 could not sleep at night. After | ithat came other complications which | ran me down. I could not stand the | wear and tear of those bee cansesnae | y lone. ‘Although my nerves were all} tingling and jumpy, I felt listless and | drowsy, But soon after starting on | Tunlae I began to pick up and feel really alive and strong. Now I am/ entirely free from the headaches, | {neryousness and other distressing | !symptoms which had made life a! nightmare. All thanks to Tanlac.” If overworked or neglect have taken toll of your health, start in on Tanlac today. It is nature's own | jowned the mine and who held trust jgist nas it. Interested in the Trust are O. O. Lee, Gilbert Peterson, N Barbie, ry Burman, E. P. Crain, C. G. Boise, and Dr, A. 'H. Brandt. Action to quiet title was brought by the trast after Brandt had pur- chased the property from the Her-! cules Powder company, which had se-| ured it on a judgm Creditors! ‘of the company which had previously | is in place, notes onposed the title quieting. W. H. Stutsman appeared in behalf of the creditors and C. L, Crum in! behalf of the trust. Judgment of Lower Court Is Unchanged Where a case triable to a jury is tried only to a judge, the supreme court will not upset the judgment un- less it shown that the e judgment y in the case of E, Baird, as receiver for the First nk of Minot, vs. Albert se before the court it wa: “Abrsthand to the ban! t_ consideration. peala by Baird, was with- The case was ap- {tonic and body builder, made from barks, herbs and roots. Your drug- Uver 62 million bottles sold.—Adv. "imen: Canvassing of the state capitol will be in charge of the following Robert Byrne, chairman, Martin Hagen, Frank Milhollan, L. A. Winter, E. G. Wanner and C._A. Fisher. The Business and Professional Women’s club members will solicit | the women clerks and stenog- ate on almost all candy cases, what is in each bar soyou plete bar YOU like. Select YOUR NOW and get it when you are near astore selling candy. Wi do you like? Mie | Nut between criep pure mo- wa raah Jor Chase's Distior Crip a, Garamel © Susts — Pignolis nuts. | yer Ee ee Nut C Carcmel bon: bo cela sc treet y ah for Chaie’s Maple Wolnai ber ee See co — Wafers and cream. juts. Butterscotch caramel. Mille preg Melted mitk smalls favored uscious nougat wu aah Yor Chane’s haste MU ber, ~Large, fresh Double Chase’s B Sott: —ash for "3 * (Be sure to try "Tween Meals.) Bay A ooPbord Marshmallow, Wine eal for Chase's fuanbe has: Goopamet ooh freshly grated in rich ee aah for Chne’s Cases fon bs Only in cars much higher in price will you Gnd euch smart- messof line, such beau- ty of design and such elegance of appoint- ment as in the Most Beautiful Chevrolet! ~ .New Fisher Bodies; Smart new Duco colors; Full-crown, one-piece fenders; Bullet-type head- lamps; » more massive radiator; Duco finished instru- ment’ panel; Cowl lamps;‘‘Fish-tail’* Modeling on.2-pas- Valve-in-head motor; Three-point Motor Suspension; Single- salloag anringe semi-el springs; Stronger and sturdier frame; full size 17 inch steering wheel; Bal- loon tires; Deeply upholstered cushions; Semi-reversible steer- ing gears AC Air Cleaner; ACOil Filter. CAPITAL CHEVROLET COMPANY . A CHEVROLET A DAY. Shop Service That Satisfies Broadway at Second St. Bismarck, N. Dak. RUALITY_AT_LOW.cosT hone 432 me BURGER BROS § - Color, Frageence. Attraction . ‘not indi be. proved and bea tifled through the Paprericneree imac ATs ffieat tn se in this cla —naspuriui, ‘snapdragons, petunies, marigolde, poppies, sweet peas. and many others. “Annuals are the and the many rieties borders, et nd simest every ‘Stanantdg color imaginable. Many are fragrant and have long stems "Rockets which make them desirable for = “No better Mower seed is offered you, at any price, than that now pve in packets bearing the name of North: King &Co. All the old favorites and many other splend: varieties can now be selected fromthe Sterling Seed Box. At Local Dealers

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