Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
PAGE EIGHT N. D. ENTERING ERA OF GREAT | DEVELOPMENT Next Year to See Big Move- ment of Land Here, Says Minnesota Banker North Dakot entered upon a od of great development and the | ng 12 months will a big nent of farm lands in this state, aq, yney, Heron Lake, Minn., banker declared today while in Bis niarek transacting business. He o land in the vicinity of Leith and plans to visit it before his return ome f the advertising campaign of your Greater North Dakota seiution has been as effective in other states as it has in southern Minnesota. tainly changed ds and thou out the oppor: r ¢ p ¢ opinion sands of tunities off moderate me farm home,” “AIL through tions of low have travel months, Th ments on N Tenant sufficie that section sturt on the North Dakota this stu T and will 1 yourt pr of a farm in a lower priced ly int ; good a valuable addition to nt population. Speeded Up “The men who h: state development nd file of e its activ Years peeded up pment by at I expect to see Min- Dakota and other states organize along similar lines. The thinking men in other states are impressed with what is being accom plished in North Dakota through or- ganized effort.” any political talk while in the state. He declared it a welcomed sign in the agricultural section of the United States. JULY 13 SET After Mine was exhausted and FOR TRIAL OF QUSTER CASE Geffert, MecDcnald to Tried at Fort Yates, Be- fore Judge McKenna With a panel of 40 jurors called, trial of Harry Geffert and R. B Be} “Your last legislature was one of the most conser legislatures in the mid-west or northwest,” Mr. Ma- loney added, “and 1 believe it was typical of the trend of thought in North Dakota. I visited with Gov- ernor Sorlie und other state officials this morning and I was impressed with the fact that they seemed to be more interested in state development problems than politics.” North Dakota's crop prospect at this time is the best he has seen in the northwest, the Minnesota concluded. He predicted the state's 1927 return from agricultural prod- ucts would near the half billion dol- tar mark. Meetings Planned For McLean County Farmers Next Week Washburn, N. D., July 6.—(Special to the Tribune)—All farmers of Me- Lean county interested in sheep or purebred sires are invited to attend one of a series of meetings arranged for next week by County Agent A. L. Norling, when the buying of sheep and purebred bulls will be discussed. It is planned to buy locally where possible, but when this cannot be done, plans are being made to make shipments in carload lots in order to cut the freight rate as low as possible. A. M. Appland, one of the good livestock breeders of the state, will be the principal speaker at the mect- ings, the first of which will be held at Garrison on Monday, July 11. The second will be at Coleharbor on Fri- day, July 15, and the third at Under- wood on Saturday, July 16. Each meeting will start at 8 p. m. Schlosser-Hamilton Bills Legality to Be Reargued July 8 Reargument on constitutional ity of the Schlosser-Hamilton bills will be had in the supreme court July 8. The bills would permit non-profit holding corporations, organized by state educational institutions, to fi nance the construction of —dormi- tories. A friendly test suit was brought. in connection with a dorm itory proposed to be built under the law at the agricultural college in Fargo. Only four judges heard the argu- ment presented to the court several weeks ago, Chief Justice Birdzcll having held himself disqualified. District Judge George M. McKen- na of Napoleon will sit in Judge Birdzell’s place at the ‘reargument Friday, Man Caught in Miles City Wanted at Fargo on Bad Check Charge Requisition papers were issued here today for the return from Miles City, Mont., to Fargo of Morris Wol- perty, alias Morris Banckoft, charged with issuing a bad check. Banckoft, who id to have represented him- self itudent at the United States military academy at West Point, is eharged with having passed a bad check on, William Stern, Fargo. Jamestown College Graduate Honored July 6—4P)— aug, who grad- stow: been elected an honorary member of the Royal Norwegian So- ciety of Pathology, according to an Aarouncement made at the local in- stitution today. Dr. Birkhaug is widely known his -work in anti-toxins and especiall; bd Lh ceregte oc a8, Rant Seale s e only other Amer. ent ist so honored this aed Hektorn of the Uni 0, local college au 1 for 1 man }decide the question ré college in|. McDonald, ux county commis-| sioners against whom ouster pro- ceedings have been started, will be held at 10 c’clock Wednesday, | July 13, at Fort Yates. This de-| cision was announced _ yesterday! afternoon by Judge H. L. Berry Judge George E. Mcixenna leon has been called by Judge to sit in the ¢ He is to dl by de- fense counsel as ty the jurisd of the court in the cases. The commissicners are charged with having ¢éollected illegal fe failure to do their duty in build- ing county roads, and purchas2 of road machinery valued at over $100 without advertising for bids.! Services Are Held | For Mrs. W. Kuebker| Funeral services ater t day ai Kuebker, who died | after twe weeks’ with spinal meningitis. Services were held from the Meth- odist church, with Rev. S. F. Halfyard officiating. Pallbearers at the se s were y Boley, Chas. Zach- bberts, Tony Dorfler aard, Mrs. Kuebker leaves band and eight child Wilda, N Be: held at 2| her hus: Harcid, Arthur, Ruby, Kenton, Dor- | othy, Grace and Robert. She also | leaves two brothers: Harry Kelley | of Coquila, Ore., and Cecil Kelley cf Los Angeles. Joins Mother in Pulpit _flyin§ over France most of the night in vain and fos, Byrds e was forced to try a land: on the tench awe vere 1 Mandan of| Story of E ‘Whe ands oe of the bi Eragon ly skidded about 100 out into the sur! Ly wae News | COUTURE TRIAL SET FOR 19TH Alleged Rustler to Go Before Judge Pugh in Grant County Court George Couture, alleged cattle rustler, is to go on trial at Carson | July 19, with Judge Thomas H. Pugh of Dickinson presiding, it was announced yesterday. When Couture’s case was called Grant county district court, in with Judge H. L. Berry presiding, |! an affidavit of prejudice was filed and Judge Pugh was called. Three men. alleged to have worked with Couture in the cattle rustli now in the state e Ben and Frank and Richard Trackhider, isux Indian. Paul Goodiron, con- victed of grand larceny in Corson ccunty, S. D., and another alleged member of the gang, died Sunday afternoon in the state penitentiary i lls, S. D., according to d Press dispatches. His death removes one of the possible witnesses from the case, | Personal and | Social News of | Mandan Vicinity | ee cel o ACCEPTS POSITION MILWAUKEE Miss Arabella Warren, who has been the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Warren, since her graduation from Marquette Uni- versity in June, left Tuesday for aukee where she has accepted positicn in the advertising de- tment of -the Boston store, 's largest ntly received her degree in journalism. TO MT. VERNON, WASH. Mrs. Bertha Ricker left today fer Mt. Vernon, Wash., where she will make her home with her son, IN *)home in Canada, s.|his assoc “Two is company, three is a crowd,” was the subject first sermon in Chicago b: ter of Aimee Semple Mc shows the young Roberta Starr Semple, 16-yes erson, the evant les to “fight the devil for souls” in the list wi indy C evangelist’s bob. THE BISMARCK: TRIBUNE End of Byrd’s Flight* Using the collapsible rub’ ig So paddled te shore. Fai the orltiare sane on the exhas after the 40 hour Flight *| WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT HAPPIER AS — CHIEF JUSTICE THAN AS PRESIDENT Would Rather Be Where He Is Than in White House, He Tells Asscciated Press Cor- | respondent; Considers Him- self Not Fitted For Political Arena (BY JOHN T. SUTER) (Mr, Suter has been a Wash- ington cor pondent for more than 40 y Since 1921 he has been a member of the Wash- ton staff of the Associated s, assigned to the supreme court.) Washington, Jul: )—Untrou- the maddening swirl of poli- iam Howard Taft is round- seventieth year happier daily work than he ever has been before, in or out of office, He looks back over the two-score Years of public service, the only man who has been both president and chief justice, says quite frankly that he does not consider that he was “fitted” for the political arena, and that he would rather be where he is today than in the White House. He is so well satisfied, gand so greatly encouraged over the recent improvement in his health, that he has no intention of leaving the bench when he becomes eligible for retire- ment. He will be 70 years old in September and, if he chose, could retire on full pay in 1931, when he had offered him a place on the su- preme court bench. At that time Taft was governor general of the “I declined because it was not deemed wise at that time, from a Philippine standpoint, to’ have a change in the office of governor,” he id. “The people wanted me to nd I yielded, although it had always been my ambition to serve on the bench. I do not care for politics.” With a smile that rippled into a hearty laugh he added: “Not that I have no interest in completes 1$ years service as chief | such matters, but I am not fitted for ce. harness. Comparative Requirements These disclosures were made to the ciated Press by Mr. Taft in i friendly and intimate talk with the correspondent just before he left Washington recently for his summer He now has con- sented to publication of this talk, in wi he touched on many personal subjects and discussed, with a know!- edge no other man ever possessed, the comparative requirements of the presidency and the chief justiceship. As he approaches his comparison of the two great offices he has held, Mr. ‘aft made a passing reference to Theodore Roosevelt. Although he has near him no memento of the years of : tion with Roosevelt, the chief justice mentioned without a rufflen h litical friend and then his bitter op- ponent. He related. how Roosevelt Charles _ Ricker. 2 Smith of Seattle and Mrs. Hattic Westcott, sister and cousin of Mrs. Ricker, accompanied her on the trip. They have been the guests; of Mrs. R. W. Shinners, a daugh- ter ef Mrs. Ricker, for some time. GUESTS FROM MINNESOTA Mr. and Mrs. George Sauter and family and Mr. and Mrs. Ebin Dennis and family of Hutchinson, Minn., are guests at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Reko and Mr. and Mrs, J. J. Reko en route tc the Black Hills, Yellowstone Park and the west coast. r. and Mrs, Louis Reko will accompany them through the Black Hills. TO BAGLEY, MINN. Mr, and Mrs. Ross Hartwick and daughter, Betty Lou, and Miss Betty Mackin left Tuesday for Bagley, Minn., where they will be the guests of Mr. Hartwick’s par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hart- wick. WILL VISIT FRIENDS Misses Marie and Nonnie Mc- Cormick left Tuesday for points ir California, where they will be the guests of friends and relatives. En route they will visit friends in Dickinson. ) WILL SPEND SUMMER HERE Miss Winnifreth Simpson, who has been studying at the Academy of Fine Arts in Chicago, arrived in Mandan Tuesday to spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Simpson. merman left Sunday for a motor trip to lake resorts in Minnesota. They will be away about'ten days. Mr. and. Mrs. Fay Sloan have returned customary good nature} the man who was his staunchest po-! But he prefers to remain in| the hustlings and. controversy.” Retains Personal Contacts He enlarged upon this theme by sointing out that with him elevation o the highest judicial office in the country had not, as’ with some of his - predecessors, broken personal sontacts with friends or with people generally. He retains a keen inter- est in current events and reads much; and he does not find himself lonesome for the society of office- seekers and politicians. “I do not mind what is sometimes called :the monastic life of the bench.” he continued. “ I have most delightful assistants in the court and very pleasant relations with members of the bar. These are, it should be noted, exactly defined, but the truth is you are more isolated in the presi- dency. While a president sees a great many people, he cannot avoid defending himself against too great familiarity. He has got to be re- rved and careful. “The responsibilities of the presi- dency are nerye wracking. If one is constituted like an ordinary man, life health’ sahe TRY “ Quick, safe, sure relief from painful callouses on the fest, Atal drug and shoe sores “VULCANIZING © Tires ‘and Ti Oil and Grease Paste. ee “Tire Co. “Next: to First Guaranty Bank in the presidency, while not requir- ing the same mental and intellectual ‘abor that attaches to the chief justtceship, does enormously consume nervous energy, and is more trying than work on the bench. _"The difference between the exac- f, in the responsibility of the conclusions, the benefit of oral argu- nents by counsel, and of briefs sub- mitted on both sides of the contro- versy. : Much Time for Study _ “And you have control of your ‘or careful study. In the presidency you often have to ‘make a decision of &@ question on the instant or over- ‘ ——— night, or in so short a time that the tisk of mistake is grea id then you have not the benefit of argument on both sides, often no argument on either, and you cannot always con- sult your cabinet. > “Of course the presidency is the office that attracts in the sense of power one is supposed to exercise, and there those who greatly en- joy its constant exercise. But even in the strongest it takes much out of a man, and the strain is felt long after retirement to private life. “The character of work on the bench, its steadiness and the regu- larity with which you can order your life, if you do not overdo the social part, makes it consistent with long life, hard as the work is.” * WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1927 The can el ef justice added that he now joy a “greal vacation,” some- _ thing he could not do while presi-7* dent. He puts aside entirely tl duties of the court during his sum mer rece at his place on Mur- ray Cove, has a genuine res- jpite from work makes the most o' jon, for by his physi- t not overtax his RELIGIOUS UNREST IN INDIA London, July 6.—(#)—The Evening News’ Allahabad correspondent says that religious unrest is reported from many parts of Indi ind that, despite orders to the contrary, mass meet- ings, attended by thousands of per- ré_being held at Lahore. Statement of Condition . at the Close of Business *, Loans and Diseounts United States Bonds Banking House and Other Real Estate .. ; ; Loans and Securities available as cash .. JUNE 30, 1927 RESOURCES (Time) ....... Cash on Hand and Due from Banks ......... LIABILITIES | Capit Bigck: (. 6b. kaa Surplus, Undivided Profits and Reserves ..... Circulation .............. MRCOG ess wcies oc s'senis eeaivemmineenltene $1,828,167.8) 84,550.00 143,202.72 988,297.82 666,375.68 $3,720,694.08 -$ 100,000.00 235,941.85 74,500.00 .. 8,810,152.18 $3,720,594.0% “The First National Bank of Bismarck ys CA INCORPORATED 1879 THE PIONEER BANK |, amt a> oan “CO q Zh a, J 5) Y SH PRIZES FIND THE TWINS ‘OLKS, that’s the big question. Can YOU find the Twins? Here's a brand new puzzle, Loads of fun and big Re- wards. First. Prize, Second Prize and Third Prize are each $1,000. Quick—find the Twins and hurry in your answer, They are all alike, you say? Whoa! Not so fast! They are not all clothed the same. Many young ladies look alike, and the eighteen on this page look-like each other, but the “TWINS” are dressed exactly the same. Now look again, How about the hats? Trimming is different, isn’t it? More Clues you. ARE ASKED TO THE TWINS Ee CLOTHED Now then, about tl ove Tt takes upon closer ation you will find o differen thelr wearing apparel. Hay all earrings or necklaces? ir dresses? Find ro that ard exactly identical in rea? care and clever- ness to find the two real TWINS, THAT ARB A ALIKE, examin- BXACTLY in iz ‘the | @Fe each $1,000 in there ts 6,000 in ca this contest ed promptly aft ef eC ai oyu ON Fpot" () 10 Ni ot it! FORTY 00: 1000.1 GRAND Ot tax pe IN ALL a tingle minute's time. Get th you fina er th ad os fd, the, ite AN, maa and pi rt romptl; of 142, Hoe el eainiom 40, pats, ‘TWINS. ‘Send in-your answer. Win $1,000 GRBAT arrey of Cash Prizes offered; these prizes range to ® mazimum of $1,000. ‘There will be 40 winners and the first, second and third prises Cash. In all, 6,000 t | 000, Three $1,000 prises, It coats nothing to try, Duplicate pri aa SE Il give you 460 POINTS it Paazie Manager, THE ST, PADL BAILY NEWS, 8 Pol, Man