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PAGE EIGHT . POPPY SALE STARTS HERE ON THURSDAY Campfire Girls and Girl! Scouts to / 1 Legion Auxiliary Work The annual poppy drive of the} American Legion Auxiliar will cpen in Bismarck Thursday and continue during the remainder of the week. The auxiliary will be assisted by the Campfir driv } Coolidge and prominent statesmen througheut the countr President Coolidge drive: “The annual ys of the tle of pop- pies under the auspices of the| and} American Legion Auxil the Veterans of Foreign W. use on Memorial day, hi for doubl significance. It perpetuates and emphas a part.calarly 7 symbolism, calling to mind the su preme sacrifice of those who died in the of our country. § symbol not but have its fect in inspiring us to the fices demanded of all good citi- zens in peace times. Furthermore, those who buy these poppies do something very real to help the! disable veterans who in making them are able to contribute to their own support.” The poppies are made by dis- ebled soldiers in the hospitals and a part of the proceeds are returned to them. ‘Lhe entire amount earned through the sale is used in the American Legion Auxinary service program. Mrs. Olgierson expects to have} plans for the local drive completed s "| narek end libs by tomorr rd are expects ITALIAN FLYER IS HOMEWARD to BOUND TODAY: Trepasset, May 23.1) With the ‘che méliey and ng little group of townspeople men still ringing in his nder Francisco de Pine- do, Italian four continent flyer, bade farewell to the western hemisphere at dawn this morning and hopped off for the Azores and home. A light west wind was blowing a the great white Santa Marie II rose slowly from the water of the harbor and sped swiftly out of sight over the Atlantic ocean. which has carried him across the broad south Atlantic, over the im-| penetrable jungles of Brazil, over the stretches of Caribbean Sea and into Arizona, brought him today to one of the most perilous portions of the long venture since it meant t! treagheries of fog on the Banks must he successfully negotiat ed and more than 1,600 miies of open water conquered before victory was grasped. i But the Italian aviator predicted that he would be in Casdelo Branco, Horta, the Azores, within 12 hours. Ho left at 4:2 ; or 1:58 eastern standard time. Accompanying the aviator were his two companions, who in their stay here had worked inc 3 the machine to its highest peak. ° sR aaa ss | Last Minute | | Bulletins ' Se ES Se ahiei p Westfield, N. Y., May 23 Two members of the’ c running boat were drowned in Lake Erie near here today when they | leaped overboard after the craft had | heen captured by state and local! police apd was being towed into} Barcelona harbo! Braggadacio, Mo., May 23—(@)-—| Will Sherod, 30, a negro, was lynched here last night after an alleged crim. inal assault on Mrs. Henry Shot, 31,, a widow with two children. Sherod was strung up by the hands to a temporary scaffold in the town square and his body pierced with about _ twelve bullets. . Flagstaff, Arizona, May 23-—UP)— + Twenty-five persons were injured, twélve seriously, when two sections of the crack Santa Fe limited, cast , were in collison two miles west of here early today. bar ais, Warsaw, jedlahay May 23-—-%)-- ‘A tornado struck- Warsaw about 1:15 this afternoon, cutting a path from to. two blocks wide. for a stretch r eight. blocks: on the west _of the city. Houses and busi- | buildings were unroofed, trees ted and hundreds of windows « Early reports indicated ‘were no deaths or serious in- iirls and | the Girl Scouts. Mrs. G. Olgicr- | son is yreneral chairman of the; arty approval of the poppy} sale has been given by President “| New Salem farmer, o'clock local time,| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE @ NEXT SUNDAY MORNING AT 9 0’ YCLOCK € uel F. Abbott of Ashland, ‘Ohio. A Getting Out the Wrong Side of Auto} surprse’to friends as the core: TWO-CENT GAS TAX BRINGS $757,057 * Under U. S. Guidance ‘ INEIGHT MONTHS, AUDITOR REPORTS|py Five Corpor surprise to friends, as the cere- mony was performed by Judge ExposesYoutoApproachingVehicles| ®: W- shaw the 7th of May. | | | | | While there are fewer a | residences than on busy thoroughfar motorists and pedestrians AOR Visit relatives for several } Shouldn't grow careless, In the pleture shown above the driver is, i getting out on the wrong side, something he would hesitate to do were A DAUGHTER he parking on 2 congested boulevard in the city. ssouri Slope Counties, Article $ | How plans for a campaign tal more trench silos in the! | Slope are being for- | J orth Da-| lane anil thoregilegate| | introduc west M mulated by the ¢ reater agricultural col- ticle appes in’ yester Minneapolis lune. | ‘Thirteen countie re to be in \cluded in the dri Morton, Dunn, | stark, McK Grant, or and Billings. e le ty Agents R. C. andan, C. C inson, Thi M Newe.mer . Eastgate of Die sdore Martell of Cars H. Nutt of Watford City, J. C. Russell of Beach and W. H. Toussaint of Amidon. Farmer to Help j For the counties having no ciation has | county agents, the secured the services of F. R. Coo! a farmer and stockman of Sera ton, who will arrange big county {pian ics and make practical exhibi-| The toad from Rome and back,| tions of demonstration trench silos te be dug this month. Assisting in the movement are the bankers, the Northern Pacific, Sco and Milwaukee railways and ion department of the the exte state a: ultural college. The Tribune's article tells of a “who has made h money year after w herd of high producing man uses a trench silo, which cost him approximately furnishes him “feed in- “Advantages Given Some of the advantages of the trench silo are listed. They are: Low cost for emergency con- structicn. Renters can make one with little peas outlay. Needs no roof except covering cf straw or hay. Can be made where a pit silo ican not. Provides a succulent feed winter and summer. lage. - : Frost proof, fire proof’ and wind proof, Adaptable for other uses or; storage, Capacity may be increased any; time, Keeps silage for several years— an be fed at any time. Stores feed in smaller space than fodder or hay. Makes it possible to keep more end better livestock. Crops of ccrn, sweet clover, oats and peas, barley, wheat, sunflow- ers, and even wild vats, will go twice as far when ensiled as whea fed dry. Saves the entire corn crop even in years when it is touched by frost and will not mature. With a combined corn harvester and field silage cutter no silo fill- er is necessary ‘to fill a trench silo —no blower is: used. Silage may be fed to cows in a manger alongside the trench, sav- ae labor. * inlarges the country’s corn ‘belt by making it possible to use corn for silage in regions where it will not mature as grain. | "Mandan News | Ne did not Tapes however, ai | "Beste about two months ago. <a WALTON GROUP DRIVE PLANNED: TO INTRODUCE TRENCH SILOS : ; Campaign Projected For West} als his widow, Mr. leaves seven sons: Edward, pints eeeree 1 and our daughters: | ,, en Lorna, Edith State Division of League Or- i Alice oan ibe; fee ata dite pat . Ces and two sis- of San! T. Kell of | and William, at the funeral he Deyils Lak Fred, (AP)—Organizaticn of the North , Edward, Hilmar and Wil-, Dakota Division of the Izaak Wal- ‘KENNEL CLUB’ | Bismarck was elected first pres- Pent of the crganization. IS ORGANIZED Other officers are Dr. J. H. | Deg-iovers Combine to Hunt Down Pcisoners of Valu- able Pets Here ie, Golden . Bowman, Hettinger, M ation cf a “Kennel club,”\ John: J. ort to put an end to thi ‘a n, The Deed of the organization Be is to offer a standing rewar Fred @ eterson, Bismarck. ‘d of The North Dakota division went} 350, to be paid for the arrest and on record as indorsng * the seme! or of the head w palasiies who are responsible for the Missouri river as a ae oi the dogs’ deaths. ‘flood control, the movement to es- RECEP [ ION: Stirred by a new outbreak of tablish the’ Roosevelt _ national HAS REC » dog owners decided t: take tamenieee steps through for- maticn of the club. Three were poisoned yesterday and two pirds. The whole city was aroused eel weeks ago when Major A. B. Welch's valuable police dog was Licket Sale For killed by being fed ground glass. ‘Ghosts of Hilo’ RAIN PROVES BENEFICIA Missouri Slope Has Greatest Total Rainfall Ever Marked | properties to be used in the play. For Month of May dogs game laws relative to migratory a With 1.71 inches of rain since Dakota, has had the greatest total! , hestra played for danci: rainfall for May'in History: ‘The| Called to Meet at [°s'Stuvcnir’ folder issue soil is soaked to a depth of six {company to mark the anniversary feet, a tremendous moisture stor- Robinson Saturday JAY | graphically shows the progress of age for growing crops later in the Ease of filling and removing To date in ‘May there has been 6.26 inches of rain. the United States experiment sta-| the immediate steps that will be tion here show the nearest total | thken with ‘the Townley.oil well at} Will reviously to Robinson. The meeting will be held] who Pa been 5.74 in 1876 and 5.37 in 28. It wil held in the/ tell 1906. ced-in lot” which surrounds the] afternoon. ideal,| Well. The notices, sent to those men] . Father: and women in the state who loaned| that: boy before "STILL GOING meeting is being called for the’ pur-] Tramp «(stoppin f putting a to those interact hand-out) ed in the future of the well. If the} day, ma’am, rsonal and | ASOrIER Of Aas Grace Senor 8 aes | Social News of Mandan Vicinity 7 ENTERTAIN AT Bare ‘ Records of Fields pe show a stand from three to eight inches height and a large percentage of corn has been planted. HONORED AT SHOWER i Thursdav evening at a kitchen showers by twelve members of the gity school faculty. A picnic din- ner was held at Chautauqua park. Miss Hanson will become the bride school, according to an announce- ment made Saturday by L. G. Thompson, principal. Miss Hoy’s average for the four years of high TO ILLINOIS i A daughter was bern Friday to -— Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Briggs of this _city. | CHRISTIANSON ganized at Two-day Ses- sion at Devils Lake D., May_ 23— ton league of America was per-|, fected here Saturday at the con- clusion of a two-day meeting of delegates from chapters in the {ste Judge A. M. Christianson | Kirkman, Langdon, vice president; lw. S$. Adams, Lisbon, second vice ' president, and ert W. Thomp- son, Devils Lake, secretary. Elect- Jed té the bard ‘of directors were Burt Cunningham and Frank Hy- jland, De Lake; Hugo Reming- ten,’ Lisbon; James _ Campbell, | Brown, Cooperstown, andj; | pounding to game refuge in the Bad Lands of North Dakota and uniform federal presented Friday, May 27, at the city! auditerium by students of the In- pessed in the windows of the A. ucas store Saturday with a dis; irs. Hermann Scheffer is direct- bers infg the music for the operetta while Hy Mrs, Bruce Doyle is coaching the A. meeting that is expected to decide him money to carry on the digging & that has ‘been done, declare that the will be done. Ifthe meeting deci¢ to delay jdriting j suetaens antil “more suitable then hae will i sensareey, discontinued Town- tical a o that this This Mocting mi will be” tor th Can “who have put money into oe project.’ Miss: Hattie Hanson, teacher at] During the first eight months in the Central school, was honored] which the two-cent state gasoline tax been in force the state has col-| ed $757,057.16 and has paid out! enue from this source. refunds $182,837.40, a. statement! compiled by State Audtor John Steen) de| shows. of Henry Handtmann early ‘in] The refunds are! made, as provided June. by law, to persons using gasoline for| Payments to the state tre: use other than in vehicles operating! ing the eight month | totaled $620,000, the auditor reta gasoline consumption, especially tax- ; able CORAUADEION: is heaviest in the|facture ‘of whiskey for medicinal summer months and that these will| purposes will be begun under treas- show a greatly increased state rev-| ury supervision in ti aeurer du riod hat ? i the highways. Mis Mae Ree a vel Nene tigutes ace no real index of ine enough in hls own hands to ma erry . e which tl two-cent tax| refunds promptly. cf the 1927 class of Mandan high] {i ‘rrovide, Steen said, since they Siver’ only the fall, winter and carly | months, the number of refunds and that! amount refunded follows: ‘A table showing the collections by| decided to allow enough corporatio: to enter the industry to provide com- spring months. He estimates school is 93.8. Miss Helen Zahn,| . Month with an average of 93.3, is saluta-| September... -- November $29, 30,052.89 24,649.81 24,069.47 January February Mrs. H. M. Pederson. April toriun. VISITING HERE ape lags Mrs. Clem Hoard of Bi Mont., arrived Friday to the home of her parents, Mr. and] March 8,015.32 $132,837.40 “TIONG SELECT BRAINERD FOR 1998 NEETING lw. M. Oates of s of Aberdeen, S. s 1D, Elected Fifth Dis- trict Governor Mrs. E._E. Salzman left Thurs-| — -idents In suburban streets lined with @#¥ for Bloomington, IIL, where} tached t it is a guard formed of the Fargo, N. D.. May of Aberdeen, 8. D., was elected Por: ernor of the Fifth International, at the of the annual convention at the Elks building Saturday. ‘ He was elected over brook of Hibbin Slater of Oak Oats losing ‘session Rise- Minn., after Larry ad withdrawn from the raéé and succeeds W: G. Bek, Brainerd, Minn., offering to stage |the gathering at Breezy Point lodge, near Brainerd, was awarded the 1928, ithe Fitsh district was put as| tion of a motion cai the resolutian at the adop- iia corde on next annual of Duluth was _clected R. A. Arthur of Fargo,| 2 Lee of Northfield, and E. I. Prettyman of Wadena, directors. Earl Stewart of Winnipeg~ was re- elected district secretary. The Brainerd club was awarded the loving cup for having the large: percentage of its club members. i rtbee 21 dele; iSixty years ago Mrs. Rose Hartwick San Diego, Calif, the convention. and and wrote | for bringi thy Jamestown; ‘William Schull, ‘St.'the famous poem, “Curfew Must Not’ from ing the E. Eastgate, Larimore; Ring Tonight.” Carmi A. Thompson, Kenmare: Dr.,and wrote the verse while supposed Wholesale poisoning of dogs which JR, Pence, Minot; A. N. Tolan, "to be studying arithmetic, the poetes: going on in Mandan, is , Langdon; Father Corkery, Cando: Thorpe, now of won the took slate pencil st group greatest distance. The tournament| aged ee forenoon was. he was 16 then,'trophy for j recalled recently on the, poem’s anni- glans were led for his wena a isin governor for 1927. St, Paul was an committee aie 7 ‘a complete a history of the tr Mott Sunpty. Coan Company Marks Electric Company Sele aes Twentieth Anniversary With Program: Employe Is Killed at Lisbon Today Lisbon, N. ee D, May 23—(AP)— was clectro- vo while work- volt high tension os ag Tail Power, com- le with ares {oe the a safety r ps the line had to fey it eould be the groan and Mott, N. 23—Marking its Opens V Wednesday twentieth rsary, the Mott Sup- 1 ply company, pioneer store, held: saticipation or the opertta a niversary reception” here Ws i jay evening. he Ghosts of H: which will be, he program attending the in two sections, dian ‘schqol, members of the cast ay - taking place at the comp: m™ jing on a the rat, pany, ao bat, ste ay of the Hawaiian costumes and quaint Bilen Glenny} Fred Orr and the id firs: tt Melody Boys, presented num- Speakers were W. J. Glenny, Jacobsen, R. E. Trous dancing and dramatics, sen, W. E. StockweH of Fargo, Tickets for “The Ghost of Hi or Pasha of the Masonic Lod, Friday night, including .67 of an| will be on sale Wednesday at Harris others Sunday’ night, the Mandan | & Woodmansee including mest of the VULCANIZING For the second part of the recop- tion, all the guests, numbering about es . 3 taken to the Wood: Hall, Missouri Slope country of North} Townley Backers Seite eee “played and ry this concern from a small buildin resent establishment, Jamestown, N. D., May 23.—No-/to its ” largest of its kind in Nort! tices. are being sent out by A. @.|to be #i Townley, at Robinson, calling a' Dakota. golf enthusiast): me that he caddied for you all Well, I thought I'd seen ‘ve walked-40 miles’ fo Splendid! You really must on and try to make a reco the work of drilling at per res London Opinion. Whiskey to Be Made laws was brought up, it wi petition. By Five Corporations Washington, May 23.—()—Manu- ime to utilize the fail corn crop, Assistant Secretary Figures including April show that] Andrews announced. today. The 11,304 refunds have been granted by| treasury, he said, would juthorize the state auditor since he began the such manufacture’ by Mpossibly five work of collecting the gasoline tax.| corporations. It was the original intention to thorize two compaies to engage in ing the spirits, but when the question of violation of the anti- Bourbon and rye whiskey will be manufactured, with an estimated an- nual output of 3,000,000 gallons, and should there develop eventually a legitimate demand for medicinal gin, brandy or other spirits, authorization for their manufacture would be con- sidered. Next Flight Will Be Over Pacific St. Louis, May 23.—(4)—Captain Charles Lindbergh's next long flight probably will be from the United States to Australia or the Philip- pines; Major Albert Bond Lambert, « backer of the New York to, Paris flight of “the Spirit of, St. Louis,” said here today. “Lindbergh told us before he left for New York that he wanted to make a flight across the Pacific, to either Australia gr the Philippine Islands,” id Lambert. “He'll use an entirely new plane’ for this at- tempt, The ship will be assembled here in St. Louis as soon as he re- turns from Europe.” t The CURTIS Washing Equipment Costs two or three times as much as any other make. This expensive equipment mixes air with water, and atomizes the water drops at the nozzle, which cleans the finish of a car without damage to it. It is the sensible, scientific, modern car washing sys- tem, and we.charge no more than you pay elsewhere. Won't you try an “AIR MIST” wash? | LAHR MOTOR SALES CO. closing Resolati a thanking the Fargo club and other Fargo agencies aA pidings in in conve tion lanai